Current:Home > ContactCommercial moon lander brakes into orbit, setting stage for historic landing attempt Thursday -Ascend Wealth Education
Commercial moon lander brakes into orbit, setting stage for historic landing attempt Thursday
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 16:37:36
The Odysseus lunar lander fired its main engine for six minutes and 48 seconds Wednesday, putting the spacecraft into a 57-mile-high orbit around the moon and setting the stage for a landing try Thursday, the first for a U.S. spacecraft in more than 50 years.
"Odysseus is now closer to the moon than the end-to-end distance driving across Space City, Houston," spacecraft builder Intuitive Machines said on its web page. "Over the next day, while the lander remains in lunar orbit, flight controllers will analyze the complete flight data and transmit imagery of the moon.
"Odysseus continues to be in excellent health," the company added.
If all goes well, Odysseus will begin its descent to the surface Thursday afternoon, touching down near a crater known as Malapert A, 186 miles from the moon's south pole, at 5:30 p.m. EST.
"You know, of all the missions mounted to the moon in the history of mankind, there's only been a 40 percent success rate," Steve Altemus, a former space shuttle engineer and co-founder of Intuitive Machines, told CBS News in an interview last year. "We believe we can do better than that. And so, I put our odds at 75 percent success."
The odds are presumably better than that now, given the main engine's actual performance in space.
The commercially-developed lander successfully test fired the engine last Friday, one day after its launch atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The 21-second "commissioning burn" verified the engine, the first methane-oxygen propulsion system used in deep space, worked as designed.
Two trajectory correction maneuvers then were carried out to fine tune Odysseus' path to the moon, putting the spacecraft on such a precise course that a third planned adjustment was not needed. That set the stage for Wednesday's lunar orbit insertion, or LOI, burn on the far side of the moon.
The make-or-break maneuver slowed the spacecraft, nicknamed "Odie," by 1,789 mph to put the lander in the planned circular orbit.
Flight controllers at Intuitive Machines's Nova Control Center in Houston plan to work through a series of health checks, data reviews and rehearsals to make sure Odysseus is ready for its historic descent to the surface Thursday in what would be the first for a privately-built non-government spacecraft.
The main engine will once again play a critical role, dropping Odysseus out of orbit and throttling down as required to ensure a gentle touchdown at a vertical velocity of about 2.2 mph.
No realtime photos or video are expected during the descent, but flight controllers should be able to confirm touchdown within about 15 seconds of the actual landing. The first imagery from the moon is expected a half hour later.
The spacecraft is carrying six NASA payloads designed to study the lunar environment and test new technology along with six provided by commercial customers. Those range from miniature moon sculptures by artist Jeff Koons to insulation blankets provided by Columbia Sportswear and a deployable student-built camera system.
Only the United States, Russia, China, India and Japan have successfully soft landed on the surface of the moon. Three privately funded moon landers were launched between 2019 and this past January, one from an Israeli nonprofit, one from a Japanese company and most recently, Pittsburg-based Astrobotic's Peregrine. All three failed.
Peregrine and Odysseus were both funded in part by NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, or CLPS (pronounced CLIPS), designed to encourage private industry to develop transportation capabilities that NASA can then use to transport payloads to the moon.
The agency's goal is to help kickstart development of new technologies and to collect data that will be needed by Artemis astronauts planning to land near the moon's south pole later this decade.
- In:
- Moon
- Artemis Program
- Space
- NASA
Bill Harwood has been covering the U.S. space program full-time since 1984, first as Cape Canaveral bureau chief for United Press International and now as a consultant for CBS News.
TwitterveryGood! (11)
Related
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- 'Professional bottle poppers': Royals keep up wild ride from 106 losses to the ALDS
- Jax Taylor Gives Brittany Cartwright Full Custody of Son Cruz in New Divorce Filing
- Thousands of shipping containers have been lost at sea. What happens when they burst open?
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- NFL MVP race: Unlikely quarterbacks on the rise after Week 4
- Friends lost, relatives at odds: How Oct. 7 reshaped lives in the U.S.
- Covid PTSD? Amid port strike some consumers are panic-buying goods like toilet paper
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- A 6-year-old girl was kidnapped in Arkansas in 1995. Police just named their prime suspect
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Aphrodisiacs are known for improving sex drive. But do they actually work?
- TikTok star 'Mr. Prada' arrested after Baton Rouge therapist found dead in tarp along road
- 'I am going to die': Video shows North Dakota teen crashing runaway car at 113 mph
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Jax Taylor Gives Brittany Cartwright Full Custody of Son Cruz in New Divorce Filing
- After Helene, a small North Carolina town starts recovery, one shovel of mud at a time
- Heartbreak across 6 states: Here are some who lost lives in Hurricane Helene
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Adam Brody Addresses Whether Gilmore Girls' Dave Rygalski Earned the Best Boyfriend Title
Pauley Perrette of 'NCIS' fame says she won't return to acting. What's stopping her?
Helene will likely cause thousands of deaths over decades, study suggests
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Target's 2024 top toy list with LEGO, Barbie exclusives; many toys under $20
How Love Is Blind’s Nick Really Feels About Leo After Hannah Love Triangle in Season 7
2025 NFL mock draft: Travis Hunter rises all the way to top of first round