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Space Moon

Private US Moon Lander Now Headed For Earth, Might Burn Up In Atmosphere (ndtv.com) 41

The fuel-leaking Peregrine lunar lander is now "on a parth towards Earth," according to Update #16 from Astrobotic, which predicts their spacecraft "will likely burn up in the Earth's atmosphere." "Our analysis efforts have been challenging due to the propellant leak... The team is currently assessing options and we will update as soon as we are able. The propellant leak has slowed considerably to a point where it is no longer the teams' top priority...

We have now been operating in space for 5 days and 8 hours and are about 242,000 miles from Earth.

"A soft landing on the Moon is not possible," the announcement emphasizes. NDTV explains: Shortly after it separated from the rocket, the spaceship experienced an onboard explosion and it soon became clear it would not make a soft lunar touchdown because of the amount of the propellant it was losing — though Astrobotic's team were able to power up science experiments they were carrying for NASA and other space agencies, and gather spaceflight data...

Astrobotic itself will get another chance in November with its Griffin lander transporting NASA's VIPER rover to the lunar south pole.

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Private US Moon Lander Now Headed For Earth, Might Burn Up In Atmosphere

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  • by mcnster ( 2043720 ) on Sunday January 14, 2024 @12:36AM (#64157117)

    You're measuring your spacecraft's altitude in miles.

    --
    First time, its a kludge.
    Second time, a trick.
    Now its a well-established technique!

    • You're measuring your spacecraft's altitude in miles.

      They probably measured stirring the tanks in rpm as well.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by blahabl ( 7651114 )

      You're measuring your spacecraft's altitude in miles.

      There's two kinds of countries on Earth: those that use metric, and those that have sent man to the Moon.

      (yes, yes, there's exceptions noone ever heard about, like Gabon or something?)

    • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Sunday January 14, 2024 @02:55PM (#64158281) Journal

      Did you ever hear of The Gimli Glider? It was an Air Canada 767 that ran out of gas mid flight because someone screwed up imperial to metric conversions. Canada had recently converted to the metric system and not all industries were caught up. The pilot actually managed to glide it to an old WW2 training air strip in Gimli, Manitoba, north of Winnipeg, that had been converted into a drag strip for cars. No one died.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gimli_Glider#Miscalculation_during_fueling

  • Sending human remains to the moon wasn't such a good idea after all, eh?

  • Why are companies like this still using Twitter/X for their updates?
    • Cos every Tweet's timestamp says 'Earth' and they were hoping to tweet from 'Moon', or since there are many moons in the solar system 'Luna' ?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Because it is cheap and low-effort. Kind of the aged yellow press of physical news media.

      In other news, any social media we want to that ruined fast? Musk can do it!

    • Why are companies like this still using Twitter/X for their updates?

      Why wouldn't they? It's what people who aren't obsessed with politics still use.

    • Anyone remember when Musk wanted to call PayPal PayPal/X? Peter Thiel, can you please have a word with Elon?
  • spellcheck anyone?
  • "That's no moon!"

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday January 14, 2024 @08:02AM (#64157447)

    An investigation would probably find that "management" made engineering decisions.

    • Well, yeah. That's kinda part of the point.

      NASA have already demonstrated that you can land on the moon if you get a blank check from the government and award a bunch of cost-plus contracts. The more interesting challenge, now, is to see whether we can get a private company to do it for cheap.

  • "the spaceship experienced an onboard explosion"

    I hadn't heard that before, I thought it was just a leak.

  • by Toad-san ( 64810 ) on Sunday January 14, 2024 @12:45PM (#64157997)

    If it lands in my back yard, do I get to keep it? I'm thinking of previous situations: F-117, Boeing airliner door plug, thermonuclear bomb here in Nawth Ca'lina, etc.

Dennis Ritchie is twice as bright as Steve Jobs, and only half wrong. -- Jim Gettys

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