BSS
  23 Feb 2024, 22:11

American lunar lander 'alive and well,' images expected soon

 WASHINGTON, Feb 23, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The first American spaceship on the

Moon since Apollo is "alive and well" following a drama-packed touchdown, the
company that built it said Friday as it worked to download data and images
from the uncrewed robot.

Odysseus landed near the lunar south pole Thursday at 6:23 pm Eastern Time
(2323 GMT), after a nail-biting final descent when ground teams had to switch
to a backup guidance system and took several minutes to establish radio
contact after the lander came to rest.

"Odysseus is alive and well," Intuitive Teams, which achieved the first lunar
landing by a private company, posted on X on Friday morning. "Flight
controllers are communicating and commanding the vehicle to download science
data."

The Houston-based company's stock price soared by 40 percent in early trading
before paring back to 20 percent.

Engineers are working to learn the robot's precise coordinates in the
Malapert A impact crater and its tilt, as the landing phase was carried out
by the robot autonomously, using its instruments to navigate the Moon's
terrain.

The company said Odysseus, which is the size of a large golf cart, is upright
-- a relief after the Japanese space agency's SLIM lander, which touched down
in January, ended up upside-down.

- Private enterprise -

Intuitive Machines pledged to soon downlink the first images taken by the
lander, while "EagleCam," a camera could also soon release pictures from an
external perspective after the device was shot out of Odysseus in the final
seconds of landing.

Odysseus is the first success for a new fleet of NASA-funded lunar landers
designed to carry out science investigations that pave the way for the return
of American astronauts to the Moon later this decade, under the Artemis
program.

NASA, along with international partners, are planning to develop long term
habitats in the south pole, harvesting ice there for drinking water and for
rocket fuel for eventual onward voyages to Mars.

A moonshot by another American company last month ended in failure, raising
the stakes to demonstrate that private industry had what it took to repeat a
feat last achieved by US space agency NASA during its manned Apollo 17
mission in 1972.

Underscoring the technical challenges inherent in the task, Intuitive
Machines' own navigation system failed and Odysseus instead flew the final
leg of its trip using an experimental laser guidance system developed by
NASA.

Confirmation of landing was supposed to come seconds after the milestone, but
instead nearly 15 minutes passed as announcers mused whether the hexagon-
shaped craft had come down "off angle."

Finally, the company's chief technology officer Tim Crain confirmed "our
equipment is on the surface of the Moon and we are transmitting," as applause
broke out in mission control.