Failed moon landing caused by altitude miscalculation, Japan startup
says
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[May 26, 2023]
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese startup ispace inc's failed
Hakuto-R moon landing mission last month was caused by an altitude
miscalculation that meant the spacecraft ran out of fuel, the company
said on Friday.
Tokyo-based ispace lost connection with the Hakuto-R Mission 1 lander
after the spacecraft attempted what would have been the world's first
commercial soft-landing on the moon's surface.
The crash was the latest setback in Japan's space programme. The
national space agency in March had to destroy its new medium-lift H3
rocket after it reached space, and its solid-fuel Epsilon rocket failed
after launch in October.
Improvements would be made for the next two missions, ispace said.
"Through these two missions, it is very important for us to increase our
knowledge as much as possible to achieve stable commercialisation in the
future," ispace chief executive Takeshi Hakamada told reporters at the
Japan National Press Club.
Whereas national space agencies dominated space exploration in decades
past, numerous private players are competing in a new space race between
the United States and its allies versus an increasingly ambitious China.
NASA has relied on Elon Musk's SpaceX to carry many of its payloads into
orbit, and last week the agency awarded a lunar lander contract to a
team led by Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin.
After launching its Hakuto-R lander aboard a SpaceX rocket with much
fanfare in December, ispace shares made a blistering debut on the Tokyo
Stock Exchange in April. But during the final landing phase in the early
hours of April 26, ispace lost contact with the craft.
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Employees of "ispace" react after the
company announced they lost signal from the lander in HAKUTO-R lunar
exploration program on the Moon at a venue to watch its landing in
Tokyo, Japan, April 26, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Shares in ispace surged to as much as 2,373 yen, more than 9 times
their IPO price, in the days following their debut. They crashed to
below 800 yen after the Hakuto-R's failure, but have since
recovered, last trading at 1,748 yen.
Photos of debris and an impact crater at the Hakuto-R's intended
landing site were released this week by NASA, which scanned the area
with its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
An ispace investigation showed that after the vehicle passed over a
large lunar cliff, a sensor software glitch caused a discrepancy
between its actual and expected altitude, and after its fuel ran
out, it plummeted the last 5 kilometres (3 miles) to moon's surface.
A second ispace mission is scheduled in 2024, with another M1 lander
due to carry the company's own rover. From 2025, the company is set
to work with U.S. space software developer Draper to bring NASA
payloads to the moon, aiming to build a permanently staffed lunar
colony by 2040.
(Reporting by Kantaro Komiya and Rocky Swift; Editing by Chang-Ran
Kim, Barbara Lewis & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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