The "Hakuto-R Mission 2" will see ispace's spacecraft delivered
by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Florida and will attempt a
lunar touchdown after four to five months of spaceflight,
Hakamada said.
"I'm excited that our re-attempt to the moon is approaching," he
told a press conference. The second mission would follow
ispace's first touchdown attempt in April 2023, which failed in
the final moments due to altitude miscalculation.
The Tokyo-based startup aims to follow the success of U.S.-based
Intuitive Machines, which in February made the world's first
private moon landing.
Hakamada founded ispace in 2010. The company now employs about
300 people in Japan, the United States and Luxembourg.
The moon is an emerging frontier in countries' race to find
water, fuel and other resources that would sustain human life,
among other goals. National missions of India, Japan and China
have landed on the lunar surface since last year.
The U.S. plans its first astronaut lunar landing in half a
century in 2026 as part of its Artemis program.
(Reporting by Kantaro Komiya; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim)
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