Featured Post

Tracking air pollution disparities -- daily -- from space

Studies have shown that pollution, whether from factories or traffic-snarled roads, disproportionately affects communities where economicall...

Monday, November 28, 2022

Japanese firm ispace is racing to put first private lander on the moon





The Japanese Hakuto-R lander is vying to be the first privately-funded spacecraft to land on the moon







Space



28 November 2022




ispace lunar lander

The ispace lunar lander inside the fairing of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket

ispace


A Japanese company called ispace is getting ready to launch its Hakuto-R lunar lander on 30 November. If the mission is a success, it will be the first spacecraft funded and built by a private firm to ever land on the moon – provided it isn’t beaten by competitors set to launch next year on a more direct route through space.


The Israeli non-profit SpaceIL made a similar landing attempt in 2019 with the Beresheet spacecraft, but it suffered a fatal engine flaw during the landing attempt and ended up crashing on the lunar surface. Like SpaceIL, ispace started working on its lander as part of the Google Lunar X Prize, which offered a cash prize to the first successful moon landing not funded by a government. The prize ended without a winner in January 2018, and so far, only governments – the US, the Soviet Union and China – have managed to land on the moon.


Since the X Prize, ispace has grown to become a multinational firm with offices in Japan, the US and Luxembourg. “We’re a quite international business already, and I’d like to position ispace as an international bridge between the US and other companies,” says ispace founder and CEO Takeshi Hakamada. The company now has contracts with NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) to land on the lunar far side and collect samples of moon dust and water, as well as other collaborations with companies and agencies around the world.

Advertisement

Its first mission, called M-1, will launch on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida on 30 November. The lander will carry a small rover for the United Arab Emirates’ Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre (MBRSC), an even smaller two-wheeled robot for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and a camera and flight computer prototype for Canadian companies. If it succeeds, it will not only be the first private moon landing but also the first time any craft from Japan or the United Arab Emirates has visited the lunar surface.



Hakuto-R’s path to the moon is a circuitous one, designed to require less fuel so the spacecraft can fit more scientific payloads aboard. Rather than flying straight there, it will use the gravity of Earth and the sun to give it an extra push during its four-month voyage. The two-metre-tall craft will weigh about 1000 kilograms when it launches, but most of that mass is propellant which will be burned on the way, and the lander will have a mass of only 340 kilograms by the time it touches down.


Once it arrives at the moon, it will spend about two weeks in orbit, with each circle around the moon taking it closer to the surface. Finally, if all goes well, it will land softly in an area called Atlas Crater.


There is a slight wrench in ispace’s plan to be the first private firm on the moon, though: there are two other contenders from the US, the Nova-C lander built by Intuitive Machines and the Peregrine lander from Astrobotic. While both spacecraft are not scheduled to launch until early next year, they will take more direct routes to the moon and could potentially beat Hakuto-R there.


“We don’t care very much about who is going to land first,” says Hakamada. “Our vision is to create an economically viable lunar ecosystem – I don’t think it’s possible to do that with only one company, so we want several companies to do business there.” The company has two more lunar missions already in development, with the goal of maintaining momentum with launches in 2024 and 2025.


Sign up to our free Launchpad newsletter for a voyage across the galaxy and beyond, every Friday



More on these topics:





#Space | https://sciencespies.com/space/japanese-firm-ispace-is-racing-to-put-first-private-lander-on-the-moon/

No comments:

Post a Comment