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Ispace aborts Moon mission

Ispace aborts Moon mission

The Star07-06-2025
Space setback: Hakamada (centre) waiting with members of his team for news of the expected landing on the Moon by the company's Resilience craft, in Tokyo. — AFP
The country's hopes of achieving its first soft touchdown on the Moon by a private company were dashed when the mission was aborted after an assumed crash-landing, the startup said.
Tokyo-based ispace had hoped to make history as only the third private firm – and the first outside the United States – to achieve a controlled arrival on the lunar surface.
But 'based on the currently available data ... it is currently assumed that the lander likely performed a hard landing', the startup said yesterday.
'It is unlikely that communication with the lander will be restored' so 'it has been decided to conclude the mission', ispace said in a statement.
The failure comes two years after a prior mission ended in a crash.
The company's unmanned Resilience spacecraft began its daunting final descent and 'successfully fired its main engine as planned to begin deceleration', ispace said.
Mission control confirmed that the lander's positioning was 'nearly vertical' – but contact was then lost, with the mood on a livestream from mission control turning sombre.
Technical problems meant 'the lander was unable to decelerate sufficiently to reach the required speed for the planned lunar landing', ispace said.
To date, only five nations have achieved soft lunar landings: the Soviet Union, the United States, China, India and most recently Japan.
Now, private companies are joining the race, promising cheaper and more frequent access to space.
On board the Resilience lander were several high-profile payloads.
They included Tenacious, a Luxembourg-built micro rover; a water electrolyser to split molecules into hydrogen and oxygen; a food production experiment; and a deep-space radiation probe.
The rover also carried 'Moonhouse' – a small model home designed by Swedish artist Mikael Genberg.
'I take the fact that the second attempt failed to land seriously,' chief executive officer Takeshi Hakamada told reporters.
'But the most important thing is to use this result' for future missions, he said, describing a 'strong will to move on, although we have to carefully analyse what happened'.
Last year, Houston-based Intuitive Machines became the first private enterprise to reach the Moon.
Though its uncrewed lander touched down at an awkward angle, it still managed to complete tests and transmit photos.
Then in March this year, Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost – launched on the same SpaceX rocket as ispace's Resilience – aced its lunar landing attempt.
The mood ahead of yesterday's attempt had been celebratory, with a watch party also held by ispace's US branch in Washington.
After contact was lost, announcers on an ispace livestream signed off with the message: 'Never quit the lunar quest.'
The mission had also aimed to collect two lunar soil samples and sell them to Nasa for US$5,000 (RM21,150).
Though the samples would remain on the Moon, the symbolic transaction is meant to strengthen the US stance that commercial activity – though not sovereign claims – should be allowed on celestial bodies. — AFP
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