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Japanese Moon Lander

All articles tagged with #japanese moon lander

space-exploration2 years ago

"Japan's Moon Landing Mission Plagued by Power Glitch"

A Japanese moon lander, SLIM, successfully touched down on the lunar surface but suffered a power glitch that may end its mission prematurely. The spacecraft's solar cells are not generating electricity, and it is expected to exhaust its batteries soon. There is hope that the probe could "wake up" if its orientation improves, but this is uncertain. Meanwhile, a privately-financed moon lander, Peregrine, was stranded in Earth's orbit after a malfunction. Despite the setback, the company is confident about its next mission. JAXA's SLIM was designed to demonstrate high-precision landing and test an innovative lightweight design. Telemetry indicates that SLIM and its micro rovers may have survived the landing, but extensive data analysis is needed to determine the spacecraft's orientation and the extent of the landing's precision.

spaceflight2 years ago

Software glitch and location switch blamed for private Japanese moon lander crash.

The private Japanese moon lander, Hakuto-R, crashed during its landing attempt on April 25 due to its onboard altitude sensor getting confused by the rim of a lunar crater. The computer relied on a calculation based on its expected altitude, leading to the crash. The lander was to land on the floor of the Atlas Crater in the Mare Frigoris region of the moon's near side. The mission successfully completed eight of its nine milestones, and the mishap will not affect the planned launches of ispace's second and third missions in 2024 and 2025, respectively.

science-and-technology2 years ago

NASA Discovers Crashed Japanese Moon Lander

NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has spotted the impact site of the Japanese Moon lander, Hakuto-R, which crashed into the lunar surface during its attempt to become the first private company to safely land a robot on the Moon. The LRO released the first images of the impact site, which required scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center and Arizona State University to carefully hunt for changes to the lunar surface. While the loss of the Hakuto lander is disappointing, ispace plans to press on with at least two more missions.