A Japanese-Made Moon Lander Crashed Because a Crater Confused Its Software (go.com) 37
Last month Japanese startup ispace tried to become the first private company to land a spacecraft on the moon — but in the crucial final moments lost contact with its vehicle.
Now the Associated Press reports that company officials are revealing what happened: while trying to land, their vehicle went into free-fall. Company officials blame a software issue, plus a decision in December to change the touchdown location to a crater. The crater's steep sides apparently confused the onboard software, and the 7-foot (2-meter) spacecraft went into a free-fall from less than 3 miles (5 kilometers) up, slamming into the lunar surface. The estimated speed at impact was more than 300 feet (100 meters) per second, said the company's chief technology officer, Ryo Ujiie.
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter photographed the crash site the next day as it flew overhead, revealing a field of debris as well as lunar soil hurled aside by the impact. Computer simulations done in advance of the landing attempt did not incorporate the terrain of the new landing site, Ujiie said.
CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said the company is still on track to attempt another moon landing in 2024, and that all the lessons learned will be incorporated into the next try. A third landing attempt is planned for 2025.
Now the Associated Press reports that company officials are revealing what happened: while trying to land, their vehicle went into free-fall. Company officials blame a software issue, plus a decision in December to change the touchdown location to a crater. The crater's steep sides apparently confused the onboard software, and the 7-foot (2-meter) spacecraft went into a free-fall from less than 3 miles (5 kilometers) up, slamming into the lunar surface. The estimated speed at impact was more than 300 feet (100 meters) per second, said the company's chief technology officer, Ryo Ujiie.
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter photographed the crash site the next day as it flew overhead, revealing a field of debris as well as lunar soil hurled aside by the impact. Computer simulations done in advance of the landing attempt did not incorporate the terrain of the new landing site, Ujiie said.
CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said the company is still on track to attempt another moon landing in 2024, and that all the lessons learned will be incorporated into the next try. A third landing attempt is planned for 2025.
Ahem... (Score:2)
It's unlike the Japanese to leave trash on the moon.
A crater? (Score:5, Funny)
On the Moon?
Nobody could have expected that, that would be like tigers in Africa.
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Atari worked out that part in 1979
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On the Moon?
Nobody could have expected that, that would be like tigers in Africa.
There's no tigers anywhere to the left of India, so ...
Re: A crater? (Score:2)
Google sarcasm.
Re: A crater? (Score:1)
We have all been there.. (Score:5, Funny)
You get to the critical last few kilometers and stupid fucking windows steals the focus to ask if you want sticky keys turned on and by the time you get control again, Jeb has died.
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You get to the critical last few kilometers and stupid fucking windows steals the focus to ask if you want sticky keys turned on and by the time you get control again, Jeb has died.
Or Windows 11 suddenly decides it is time to reboot to activate the most recent update that it quietly downloaded in the background.
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Or Windows 11 suddenly decides it is time to reboot to activate the most recent update that it quietly downloaded in the background.
...which happens even when you bought the LTSB version of windows specifically so it wouldn't do that.
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WUB [sordum.org]
Not Windows' Fault (Score:5, Funny)
Lunar Stories (Score:2)
the 7-foot (2-meter) spacecraft went into a free-fall from less than 3 miles (5 kilometers) up
Is it going to be okay, Uncle Larry?
100% hindsight, I agree, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
"We ran the simulation for the old landing site. We just changed the landing site, so
Surely?
Re: 100% hindsight, I agree, but... (Score:2)
Somebody should have said that, sure. Seems like one of the following happened:
In other words: might be more of a people / management / communication problem, rather than an engineering issue?
Re: 100% hindsight, I agree, but... (Score:2)
Wouldn't Be The First Time (Score:2)
In 1893, an entirely predictable collision between two Royal Navy ships happened due to Vice Admiral Sir George Tyron's order to perform an unconventional maneuver. Bridge officers on the Admirals ship realized Tyron's error immediately but remained silent. The commander of the ship which would ultimately ram and sink the admirals flag ship (with 350+ lives lost) also recognized the inevitable result of this order. He delayed his turn but was was chastised by the Admiral, and so, followed his orders
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Re:100% hindsight, I agree, but... (Score:4, Informative)
Surely someone in the loop would have said:
You forgot this was made in Japan, Japanese in the loop would never rock the boat. It is much easier to go with the flow first, and then to apologize and bow afterwards. If one bow is not enough, then bow again.
Re: 100% hindsight, I agree, but... (Score:2)
Why does it even need a simulation? Radar altimetera have been a thing since WW2. Sounds like they decided to get clever with the landing system and it bit them. KISS is something many engineers forget.
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It is easy to be sure that when you change something, you retest it.
Doing the latter would likely have avoided the former dooming this mission.
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In Japan you do not talk back to your boss.
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SpaceX and NASA will for sure for HLS. They have the tech and will want to show off.
Japan for the mission, it might be out of scope, let them land first.
China I feel is too secretive to do that. They want to present a controlled message.
Scott Manly has a good explanation (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Re: Scott Manly has a good explanation (Score:3)
Meters == yards? (Score:2)
Aha. There's your problem, right there.
I found the problem (Score:2)
"Computer simulations done in advance of the landing attempt did not incorporate the terrain of the new landing site"
Cost cutting, I guess. Simply amazing.
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Either way, it's a management issue, not an engineering issue.
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Poor summary: the software was not confused (Score:2)
The crater didn't confuse its software.
The altitude measured by the instruments didn't match the altitude used by the lander's onboard maps. It then determined that the instruments were faulty, and used the onboard map data.
Unfortunately, the onboard map was for the previous landing site.
There was no confusion, just bad data due to a poor process.
Who comes up with these shit summaries?
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Reminds me of the worst Antarctic disaster [wikipedia.org] where a tour plane with 237 people onboard had its programmed flight plan changed without notifying the flight crew. When a "flat white" condition occurred (not rare in the arctic) and the crew could no longer see what was in front of them, they did not know that the flight computer was flying them straight into Mount Erebus.
Market it as a feature (Score:1)
It didn't crash, it proved its value as a kinetic weapon for lunar warfare ;-)