
Intuitive Machines Lunar Lander Reaches Moon, Status Uncertain 26
Intuitive Machines' Athena lander touched down near the lunar south pole Thursday but may have toppled during landing, jeopardizing its scientific mission. "We're trying to evaluate exactly what happened in that last bit," said Tim Crain, Intuitive Machines' chief technology officer. Data from an inertial measurement unit suggests the 15-foot robotic spacecraft is lying on its side.
The landing issues mirror problems faced by the company's Odysseus spacecraft last year, which also toppled after touchdown. Noisy data from laser altitude instruments likely contributed to the landing complications, officials said. CEO Steve Altemus reported the spacecraft isn't generating expected power, probably because its solar panels are improperly oriented. The company believes Athena landed somewhere on Mons Mouton, though outside the planned landing zone.
The $62.5 million NASA-contracted mission carries several payloads, including a drill to search for frozen water, three small rovers, and a rocket-powered hopping drone. NASA officials indicated some experiments might still function despite the lander's orientation. Intuitive Machines' stock fell 20% Thursday following reports of the spacecraft's problems.
UPDATE: Athena Spacecraft Declared Dead After Toppling Over On Moon
The landing issues mirror problems faced by the company's Odysseus spacecraft last year, which also toppled after touchdown. Noisy data from laser altitude instruments likely contributed to the landing complications, officials said. CEO Steve Altemus reported the spacecraft isn't generating expected power, probably because its solar panels are improperly oriented. The company believes Athena landed somewhere on Mons Mouton, though outside the planned landing zone.
The $62.5 million NASA-contracted mission carries several payloads, including a drill to search for frozen water, three small rovers, and a rocket-powered hopping drone. NASA officials indicated some experiments might still function despite the lander's orientation. Intuitive Machines' stock fell 20% Thursday following reports of the spacecraft's problems.
UPDATE: Athena Spacecraft Declared Dead After Toppling Over On Moon
Upgrade? (Score:4, Funny)
Lander Tipping? (Score:3)
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Lander tipping? Mooooo!
Yup. Those moon kids are just mischievous little bastards.
Use a mechanical arm to push itself upright? (Score:2)
Given this is now twice that this company's lander fell over after making it all the way to a soft landing on the Moon, maybe they should implement robotic arms to simply push the craft upright. It would cost money and development time, but seems worth it if it salvages a $65 million project.
Alternatively, an array of attitude jets could prevent the problem, unless the craft landed partially on a crevice, in which case... launch up a couple of meters and float to a new spot?
Re: Use a mechanical arm to push itself upright? (Score:1)
Any idiot can coast on a ballistic trajectory. It's starting and stopping one that pays the big bucks.
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How about showing us your work?
I know I could not without a year of copy and paste from more than three websites.
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"Technically, stopping a ballistic trajectory is rather simple as well"
Well, it would be accurate to calculate an intercept course and crash the darned thing. I just calculated you weren't that disingenuous. But you missed the simplest method of all. Don't bother to launch.
Well, this is /.
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Don't bother to launch.
What's the fun in that? Then I wouldn't get to have sarcastically pedantic conversations about crashing into the moon with a random stranger on the Internet.
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Well, when you put it that way, how may I help you further to harvest mod points?
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I got that. I use mod points regularly, but I do not go in and beat on pedants when I'm not interested in the thread, or it makes less than no sense to.me.
Mind you, I can go years without mod points. It happens.
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8 year old could take a crayon and draw a huge robot arm on a lander too.
You can't tee that up and not expect someone to take a swing. [wikipedia.org]
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That's a good option too! When I read the summary I was inclined to suggest that they bolt the experiments on the next iterations to the sides of the craft instead of the floor. Just in case, you know :-)
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I was inclined
While the craft is inclined, you didn't have mimic the craft to make the same point.
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It's not only about money and development time, it's also about mass (AKA weight). You can only deliver the specific amount of equipment to the Moon by one rocket launch, and no more. If you add an arm, you have to remove something.
Seriously? (Score:2)
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Perhaps the antenna needed to provide telemetry on the craft's status is face down in the dust.
Maybe Change the Design (Score:2)