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A new company just stamped its name on the moon

2 March 2025 at 01:11
Firefly's Blue Ghost moon lander
Firefly's Blue Ghost moon lander.

Raquel Natalicchio/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

  • Firefly Aerospace landed its Blue Ghost spacecraft on the moon on Sunday.
  • Moon landings were once exclusive to government agencies, but Firefly is now the second company to do it.
  • The Blue Ghost mission, funded by NASA, includes experiments to study lunar dust and moon GPS.

Firefly Aerospace became the second company to ever land on the moon on Sunday when its Blue Ghost spacecraft plopped onto the gray dust of a lunar plain known as Mare Crisium.

Moon landings have long been the sole domain of government space agencies, but no longer.

Blue Ghost is one of a series of commercial missions ushering in a new era, with companies joining the race to the moon in a bid to build new industries of space tourism and mining.

The first image captured during Firefly's mission.
The first image captured on the moon by the Blue Ghost mission.

NASA/Firefly Aerospace

Though the Blue Ghost mission is funded by NASA and carries 10 payloads for the agency, Firefly built the hardware and coded the software that stuck the landing.

"This is such an incredible feat for Firefly, NASA, our nation, and the world, as we pave the way for a lasting lunar presence," a Firefly team member said on a livestream after they confirmed the landing.

Why many try and fail to land on the moon

Landing on the moon is a nail-biting maneuver, and engineers often describe it as "15 minutes of terror."

As it plummets towards the lunar surface, a moon lander must continually sense the ground below it, calculate its altitude, point itself toward a safe landing spot, orient itself to land upright, deploy its legs, and slow itself down at just the right time.

surface of moon grey rocky cratered
One of the final images of Russia's Luna-25 mission beamed back to Earth before it crashed.

Centre for Operation of Space Ground-Based Infrastructure-Roscosmos State Space Corporation via AP

There's no time for sending commands back and forth, so the spacecraft must execute this complex series of tasks without the help of the humans who built it.

"It's just the first time it's completely on its own, making decisions," Ray Allensworth, the director of Firefly's spacecraft program, told Business Insider in mid-February. "I think a lot of us will be holding our breath, you know, lighting a candle."

Many have tried and failed. The moon is littered with crashed spacecraft from India, Russia, an Israeli nonprofit, and the Japanese company ispace.

And the US company Astrobotic had to completely forgo its landing attempt last January after a valve failure caused a propellant leak in orbit.

israel beresheet private moon lander crash site enhanced nasa lunar reconnaissance orbiter lro
An enhanced picture shows the crash site of Beresheet, a lunar lander created by the Israeli nonprofit SpaceIL.

NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University

An elite few have landed softly on the moon: the Apollo-era US, the Soviet Union, China, Japan, India, and the Texas-based company Intuitive Machines, which landed its Odysseus spacecraft a little off-kilter but in one piece a year ago.

moon lander model small figurine laying sideways on a table propped on a small blue mini of itself with a torso in a suit in the background seated at the table with hands folded next to a microphone
Intuitive Machines CEO Steve Altemus shows the world how the Odysseus spacecraft landed on the moon: sideways, possibly leaning on a rock or slope.

NASA TV

Now Firefly has joined their esteemed ranks.

"Even just talking about it kind of sends a little chill down your spine," Allensworth said ahead of the landing.

What Blue Ghost will do on the moon

If all goes well, Firefly's mission will operate for about 14 Earth days, which is a full lunar day. The landing site, Mare Crisium, is in the northeast quadrant of the near side of the moon. It's relatively free of craters and boulders, making it a perfect site to study the lunar surface.

The experiments onboard the lander include a drill to probe just beneath the lunar surface and a vacuum to suck up lunar dust โ€” both from Jeff Bezos's space company Blue Origin โ€” as well as a demo computer from Montana State University that's designed to withstand extreme radiation, and an Italian experiment that's "like GPS for the moon," Allensworth said.

At the end of the lunar day, Blue Ghost plans to observe the sunset and study how the sun causes moon dust to levitate, a mysterious phenomenon observed by Apollo astronaut Eugene Cernan.

Even before landing, Allensworth said, "I think we have a lot of things to be proud of. We've returned a really significant amount of data for our payloads and from the spacecraft."

All of that data will inform the company's next mission, which aims to land on the far side of the moon in 2026.

"Ultimately, our goal is that we're going to the moon at least yearly and hopefully increase that cadence over time," Allensworth said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Photos from space show the Texas company Firefly Aerospace preparing to land on the moon for the first time

22 February 2025 at 00:31
earth swirly white and blue orb half visible in the blackness of space with the moon a tiny white-grey dot in the distance below
Earth with the moon in the distance, at the bottom, as captured by Firefly's Blue Ghost lunar lander.

Firefly Aerospace

  • The Texas-based company Firefly Aerospace is flying its first moon mission, called Blue Ghost.
  • New photos show how far the spacecraft is traveling for its moon landing attempt on March 2.
  • Photos like these are rare since NASA ended the Apollo program 52 years ago, but a new era is beginning.

A new mission to land on the moon is beaming back stunning photos that put our world into perspective.

Look closely at the above image. There are two worlds in the photo. The moon is a tiny dot in the distance, visible below Earth.

The photo comes from the uncrewed Blue Ghost spacecraft, built by the Texas-based company Firefly Aerospace. The mission is en route to descend to the lunar surface on March 2.

Success would make Firefly the second private company to ever land on the moon, just one year after a historic touchdown by Intuitive Machines.

The mission is a harbinger of a new era in space, where companies race to the moon to build the infrastructure for a future economy of lunar tourism, mining, and exploration.

Photos from the Blue Ghost spacecraft

The below image, which Firefly released on February 12, shows Earth reflecting off the spacecraft's solar panel. Believe it or not, the moon is in this photo, too. See it?

earth swirling blue and white and brown marble in space with its reflection shining on a spacecraft solar panel in the foreground and the moon visible as a tiny grey dot in the far distance
Earth reflects off the Blue Ghost spacecraft's solar panel.

Firefly Aerospace

On its way to the moon, the spacecraft has crossed over 715,000 miles in space.

As it crept closer to the moon, the spacecraft conducted a critical engine burn to insert itself into lunar orbit, where it's set to hang out until it's time for landing.

A few hours after the burn, the spacecraft sent its first up-close images of the moon.

the moon hemisphere glowing bright almost white covered in craters against the black of space
The moon's south pole, on the far left, captured by Blue Ghost after it entered lunar orbit.

Firefly Aerospace

"I almost started crying because we're finally at the moon," Ray Allensworth, the director of Firefly's spacecraft program, told Business Insider.

Looking at the photos is "really surreal," she said.

Blue Ghost has 10 experiments and plans to capture a lunar sunset

spacecraft solar panels and shiny  gold cubic arm in the foreground with the moon looming dark gray and cratered in the background
Firefly's Blue Ghost lander in lunar orbit.

Firefly Aerospace

Blue Ghost is carrying 10 experiments and instruments for NASA, including a system to collect samples of moon dust and a radiation-tolerant computer that will test whether the technology can survive the extreme radiation on the moon.

If the mission successfully lands on the moon, its payloads are set to operate for about 14 days, which is a complete lunar day.

If all goes to plan, one of its final acts will be to capture the lunar sunset, studying how the sun causes moon dust to levitate, a mysterious phenomenon observed by Apollo astronaut Eugene Cernan.

Until then, Blue Ghost is orbiting the moon while its human operators prepare for landing.

Photos from fresh new spacecraft headed to the moon have been scarce since NASA ended the Apollo program, with no US moon landings since 1972 until last year's Intuitive Machines mission. These images could become common again, though, if Firefly has its way.

"Ultimately, our goal is that we're going to the moon at least yearly and hopefully increase that cadence over time," Allensworth said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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