The Prague Post - Sideways American lander sends first images back from Moon

EUR -
AED 4.133496
AFN 79.901014
ALL 98.300698
AMD 437.813036
ANG 2.028226
AOA 1031.956036
ARS 1268.145798
AUD 1.754269
AWG 2.025649
AZN 1.917581
BAM 1.956366
BBD 2.271357
BDT 136.679539
BGN 1.955871
BHD 0.424209
BIF 3300.119807
BMD 1.125361
BND 1.460409
BOB 7.77318
BRL 6.356604
BSD 1.124925
BTN 96.00592
BWP 15.252938
BYN 3.681332
BYR 22057.066742
BZD 2.259634
CAD 1.569147
CDF 3232.035901
CHF 0.935968
CLF 0.02739
CLP 1051.087158
CNY 8.144577
CNH 8.147858
COP 4768.715323
CRC 570.960096
CUC 1.125361
CUP 29.822055
CVE 110.567117
CZK 24.960277
DJF 199.999519
DKK 7.463508
DOP 66.22791
DZD 149.7051
EGP 56.934474
ERN 16.880408
ETB 149.564776
FJD 2.553673
FKP 0.845242
GBP 0.845881
GEL 3.08916
GGP 0.845242
GHS 14.79893
GIP 0.845242
GMD 80.467613
GNF 9740.562555
GTQ 8.652503
GYD 236.030939
HKD 8.754011
HNL 29.079754
HRK 7.537782
HTG 146.911194
HUF 404.297467
IDR 18625.223483
ILS 3.986174
IMP 0.845242
INR 96.130943
IQD 1474.222318
IRR 47377.679471
ISK 146.983775
JEP 0.845242
JMD 178.811727
JOD 0.798223
JPY 163.66573
KES 145.738469
KGS 98.413212
KHR 4518.322995
KMF 491.224149
KPW 1012.802732
KRW 1571.172561
KWD 0.345153
KYD 0.937442
KZT 580.552785
LAK 24319.041837
LBP 100832.305501
LKR 336.104243
LRD 224.513674
LSL 20.538259
LTL 3.322898
LVL 0.68072
LYD 6.116379
MAD 10.412403
MDL 19.279978
MGA 5024.735237
MKD 61.530109
MMK 2362.563611
MNT 4024.463103
MOP 9.012527
MRU 44.508436
MUR 51.440657
MVR 17.33476
MWK 1954.75166
MXN 21.888432
MYR 4.835718
MZN 71.914736
NAD 20.538254
NGN 1808.578614
NIO 41.04757
NOK 11.670496
NPR 153.609072
NZD 1.904164
OMR 0.433006
PAB 1.124915
PEN 4.097481
PGK 4.572383
PHP 62.307881
PKR 316.455551
PLN 4.233663
PYG 8993.601699
QAR 4.097157
RON 5.12017
RSD 117.243917
RUB 92.791924
RWF 1602.51342
SAR 4.22104
SBD 9.389874
SCR 15.97473
SDG 675.783146
SEK 10.925567
SGD 1.460947
SHP 0.884357
SLE 25.60237
SLL 23598.229739
SOS 643.147674
SRD 41.30355
STD 23292.691251
SVC 9.842847
SYP 14631.484448
SZL 20.538246
THB 37.092299
TJS 11.642765
TMT 3.950016
TND 3.394369
TOP 2.635711
TRY 43.602999
TTD 7.642143
TWD 34.05499
TZS 3035.664164
UAH 46.730357
UGX 4117.191035
USD 1.125361
UYU 47.023603
UZS 14500.271038
VES 104.337792
VND 29235.178998
VUV 136.341926
WST 3.126761
XAF 656.14098
XAG 0.034382
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.041344
XDR 0.80874
XOF 647.649041
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.094795
ZAR 20.47858
ZMK 10129.599402
ZMW 29.613303
ZWL 362.365637
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.34

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.2500

    36.62

    -0.68%

  • BCE

    0.4800

    22.71

    +2.11%

  • RIO

    0.8000

    59.98

    +1.33%

  • BCC

    -0.9600

    88.62

    -1.08%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    10.46

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    0.2700

    67.57

    +0.4%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.06

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    65.2700

    65.27

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.5100

    70.69

    +0.72%

  • BTI

    -1.6600

    41.64

    -3.99%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.98

    +0.23%

  • BP

    1.1800

    29.77

    +3.96%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    10.55

    +0.47%

  • RELX

    0.3486

    53.85

    +0.65%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    9.3

    +0.54%

Sideways American lander sends first images back from Moon
Sideways American lander sends first images back from Moon / Photo: Handout - Intuitive Machines/AFP

Sideways American lander sends first images back from Moon

An American lunar lander that tipped over during touchdown has sent back its first images from the farthest south any vessel has ever landed on the Moon.

Text size:

The uncrewed Odysseus, built by Houston-based Intuitive Machines, returned the United States to Earth's cosmic neighbor last week after a five-decade absence, in a first for the private sector.

But one of its legs caught on the surface as it came down, making it pitch over in the final act of a drama-packed journey that was saved by an improvised fix.

"Odysseus continues to communicate with flight controllers in Nova Control from the lunar surface," Intuitive Machines said Monday in an update on X, formerly Twitter.

The post included two pictures: one from the hexagon-shaped spaceship's descent, and the other taken 35 seconds after it fell over, revealing the pockmarked regolith of the Malapert A impact crater.

NASA is planning to return astronauts to the Moon later this decade, and paid Intuitive Machines around $120 million for the mission, as part of a new initiative to delegate cargo missions to the private sector and stimulate a "lunar economy."

Odysseus carries a suite of NASA instruments designed to improve scientific understanding of the lunar south pole, where the space agency plans to send astronauts under its Artemis program.

Unlike during Apollo, the plan is to build long-term habitats, harvesting polar ice for drinking water and for rocket fuel for onward missions to Mars.

- 'Success with minor footnotes' -

Astronomer and space missions expert Jonathan McDowell told AFP the fact Odysseus was lying on its side didn't overly concern him.

It's a "success with minor footnotes -- I'd give it an A minus," he said, adding that one would "prefer it to be upright, and they've certainly got some things to figure out for future missions," but overall things are moving in the right direction for NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative.

On Friday, Intuitive Machines revealed its engineers had forgotten to toggle a safety switch that prevented the spaceship's laser-guided landing system from engaging, which forced them to upload a software patch and rely on an experimental NASA system that saved the day.

"Rocket science is hard not because any one thing is super hard, but because you have to do a million easy things all right," said McDowell of the "embarrassing" oversight.

Flight controllers will continue to download data until the lander's solar panels are no longer exposed to light, which is now estimated to be Tuesday morning, said Intuitive Machines.

It is a slightly shorter mission duration than initially planned as a result of the spacecraft's awkward orientation.

Japan's space agency also landed a spaceship wonkily on the Moon last month, but produced a surprise on Monday by waking up its SLIM lander following the lunar night, which lasts around two Earth weeks.

McDowell said the two falls might indicate the current generation of landers are too top heavy and consequently too easy to tip over in low gravity, unlike the short, squat landers built by the United States and Soviet Union during the Cold War.

O.Holub--TPP