ispace (they don't capitalize the 'i') is a Japanese company which was associated with the old Google Lunar X Prize team Hakuto, which evolved from the original White Label Space GLXP team. It raised substantial funding and carried on after the demise of GLXP. The useful part of their website is:
https://ispace-inc.com/project/
They have a multi-mission project called HAKUTO-R (R for 'reboot', a revival of the GLXP team) and the first lander is built, tested and about to be shipped to Florida for a SpaceX launch in mid-November. It carries a rover called Rashid from the UAE and contributions from Canada as well as a Japanese rover. See this press release:
https://ispace-inc.com/news/?p=2370
ispace's US subsidiary is associated with the Draper CLPS mission to Schrodinger basin, recently awarded, which will utilize a new lander from ispace larger than the Mission 1 lander.
The landing site was said to be in Lacus Somniorum north of Mare Serenitatis, but recent reports say it has moved to Atlas crater nearby - whether in or near the crater I don't know.
Launch is set for mid-November.
The spacecraft is now in Florida with a launch on or after 22 November. Lunar Flashlight, the cubesat which was not ready for launch on Artemis 1 and had to look for an alternative ride to space is apparently sharing this launch. Earlier it was said to be going with Intuitive Machines' first CLPS mission, now set to launch in March.
Phil
A press release from ispace:
https://www.ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=3939
It gives a launch date, 28 November, and a landing site which is on the northern floor of the crater Atlas. It should have spectacular views of the massive terraced crater walls above the lander.
Phil
Launch is now scheduled for Wednesday November 30, at 08:39 UTC.
Arrival at the Moon I'm not sure, about 4 months later or so.
Thorsten
Not yet...
"SpaceX is expected to roll a Falcon 9 rocket back into its hangar at Cape Canaveral for troubleshooting, postponing the planned launch of a Japanese commercial moon lander for an unspecified period. SpaceX provided no details about the reason for grounding the rocket."
https://spaceflightnow.com/2022/11/30/spacex-rocket-trouble-postpones-japanese-moon-lander-launch/
Thorsten
Launch is scheduled at 2:38 AM Eastern on the 11th.
It just launched on its way to the moon.
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=4161
Nice images from the spacecraft and good news so far on flight operations.
Phil
In the launch video from SpaceX you can see how the landing legs unfold.
Quite cute!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaaF0IgzGSI&t=4057s
Thorsten
This mission is still in flight on its long cruise. It will soon begin to ease itself into a lunar approach orbit, and then into lunar orbit, with a landing attempt late in April. The mission team release informative press releases here:
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en
Look for some Moon images coming up during March and April.
Phil
https://twitter.com/ispace_inc/status/1635950296395579394
Getting closer... dust off the old camera!
Phil
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=4440
Press release, only a few days (maybe up to a week) before lunar orbit insertion.
Phil
Lunar Orbit Insertion complete!
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=4460
Thorsten
Here is a nice french-language site on the landing area.
Phil
https://cnes.fr/fr/rover-rashid-une-cooperation-internationale-au-service-de-la-science
First time I see a landing date.
They write 23 of April!
Thorsten
Thanks for the link Phil, I’ll closely follow the mission now and report eventually.
I discovered that I know Evelyn who I met back in 2019 in Zurich at the Starmus festival. You might also know her since she normally get to LPSC. I learnt that she knows Jack Schmitt and I feel that she doesn’t always share all his conclusions about Taurus Littrow
Anyway, I’m going to write her, we’ll see.
Another quite funny story this time is about Francis Rocard. Olivier invited me, back in 2014, to attempt Philae landing in Paris with the scientists and members of the government. At the same time, I was following the landing also on UNMSF and somebody, cannot remember who, came up with a solution regarding where Philae has landed. Afterwards, I ran into Francis Rocard in the underground and told him, very excited, that I knew where was the probe but… fortunately ( ) couldn’t connect my cell phone.
"First time I see a landing date.
They write 23 of April!
Thorsten "
Other sources have said 25 April. When I look at the sunrise at Atlas crater, 25 April looks more likely. I think they want to do image-based navigation and hazard avoidance, so they need to land when the Sun is a bit higher than sunrise itself. But we will see. There is also the question of whether the date is Universal time or Japan time, nearly half a day apart.
Phil
Interesting. Thanks Phil!
Thorsten
https://twitter.com/ispace_inc/status/1640305097845481473
ispace tweets its first image of the Moon from its lander camera. It shows Langrenus crater and Mare Fecunditatis, south up as posted.
Phil
Another image, this time the far side, from the company which built the camera.
Phil
https://www.canadensys.com/canadensys-aerospace-lunar-imaging-system-captures-moon-from-lunar-orbit/
https://www.spacelaunchschedule.com/space-events/hakuto-r-m1-lunar-landing/
This website says the Hakuto-R mission 1 landing will be on the 29th of this month. I don't know where that comes from, but it is 4 days after sunrise, which seems a bit late to me.
Phil
(PS tip for anyone who doesn't know this - you can visualize the location of the lunar terminator on Quickmap by choosing to show the overlay 'sunlit region' and then selecting any date or time you want)
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=4577
Press release from ispace regarding landing. The first date is April 25th (16:40 UTC) in Atlas crater.
If there are delays there are three backup sites: Lacus Somniorum, Sinus Iridum and a site near the Mairan Domes not far from Chang'e 5, in northern Oceanus Procellarum. Landing dates at those locations occur as they rotate under the orbit plane, on April 26, May 1 and May 3 respectively.
Phil
https://twitter.com/ispace_inc/status/1648860477093494784
A tweet from ispace with another image of the Moon from orbit. It shows Mare Fecunditatis, like the first image we saw. In fact, it is the first image with two additional frames added, one on each side, to make a wider view.
Phil
https://twitter.com/akaschs/status/1650226399456940033
Landing update with viewing information.
"HAKUTO-R M1 webcast starts at 11:00 a.m. EDT, Tue April 25.
Landing sequence starts at 10:40 a.m. EDT."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpR1UUnix3g
Phil
Here are some maps of the landing site and backup sites. Keep in mind that the prime site with its 8 km landing ellipse is accurate but the backup sites (which should also be 8 km across) are only approximately located here - exact locations not yet available.
Originally GLXP Team Hakuto planned its own lander, but they dropped it and chose to fly their small rover 'Sorato' on Astrobotic's GLXP mission, which was then targeted at a collapse pit or skylight in Lacus Mortis. After GLXP ended without a winner, Hakuto was 'rebooted' as HAKUTO-R (capitalized in most publications, but it is not an acronym). At first they kept the same Lacus Mortis landing site, before moving to Lacus Somniorum and then Atlas crater.
Phil
https://twitter.com/ispace_inc/status/1650506233575604227
Earthrise during the 20 April solar eclipse.
https://twitter.com/ispace_inc/status/1650408608197390336
Oblique view across Leibnitz crater, central far side. This is apparently the target of the Chang'e 6 sample return mission.
Phil
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpR1UUnix3g
Stream has started.
Deorbit burn is expected to have occurred by now. Currently behind the lunar farside and will regain contact in 30 min if nominal de-orbit burn.
Contact re-established. Just a few minutes away from landing.
They just showed a couple videos - one looking down at the surface during orbit and another looking at Earth over the lunar limb. Both taken before, rather than live.
1 km to go.
Live updates cut out at around .18 km, 54 km/h (went to simulation right after that). Now waiting for any telemetry.
We're supposed to have landed a minute or so ago, awaiting confirmation... but it's taking a while.
A number of concerned expressions in the mission control room before cutting to a commercial break.
My wife and I were watching it and you could see it coming down really fast compared to the rapidly decreasing altitude. Fingers crossed.
Landing on the Moon is hard.
Just like India and Israel, everything fine until the last minute....
I'm keeping everything crossed. The last confirmed velocity was 54km / hour, which is about 15 meters / second. How much chance there still was to get that down from the 0.18 km altitude depends on the angle of attack - but it must have all played out fast.
Some commentary on spaceflightnow.com https://spaceflightnow.com/2023/04/25/ispace-mission-1-landing-mission-status-center/
Missions 2 and 3 will continue, they say. Important lessons will be learned!
Regardless, LRO will tell soon enough.
Update from mission control. The engineers look really depressed on the +25 minute status update from the Mission Controllers, and acknowledge it may be a failure. They will have at least 2 future missions, and they will use the telemetry they received until its last few seconds of flight to improve their processes.
--
Judging by the last few images of telemetry, its looking likely that it was a hard landing at higher than expected speeds.
We may not know its status until an orbiter can take an image of the landing site. I'm guessing mostly intact, but that impacting the surface at near 25 mph/40 kph was too much for the craft to function.
On the spacenews feed it mentions that, tentatively, at 90 meters the lander was dropping at 33 km/ hour. The previous numbers were 54km/hour at 180 meters altitude. OK... this is little better than reading entrail I realise, but if, for the sake of argument, we take these as more-or-less accurate the lander would have reached 0 meters with a velocity of just under 2 meters/sec.
This makes no account of whether the numbers are just vertical drop rate or overall velocity, or angle of descent. I just wanted to illustrate that they ispace team may not have been too far off the mark with their landing.
Great emotional moments !
The third time I watched a landing attempt on the Moon. I had watched the landing attempt of the indian probe Chandrayaan-2 and the landing attempt of the israeli probe Beresheet and each time a crash !
The deceleration of the probe at the end of the vertical descent is impressive. The error margin seems very limited for the acceptable speed at the end of the descent process.
Thanks to iSpace for the great presentation !
Sad news. So in the 21st Century it is China 3/3, rest of the world 0/3. Let's hope for more success later in the year.
Phil
The livestream included an animated simulation of the landing over a contour map of the landing site. Assuming it accurately represented the planned landing, it gives a target point at the black dot here:
Sad news to see this third failure of 3 different landing technologies (including Israel and India).
Only goes to enhance one's appreciation of the Chinese landing system, which worked 3 times in a row.
At least ispace was a softer sort of hard landing, and they will be making another attempt next year with what they learned from this one.
Even though they all happened at the same stage of of the landing process, the recent failures have all been different vehicles, so there's no data sharing of any kind on investigations to iterate changes from.
I am slightly reminded of Philae landing on comet 67P - just slightly. Which is annoying because I don't think it's reasonable, at this point, to hope for any more contact from the lander. However I am still holding out hope that we'll eventually get evidence of the lander being intact, and perhaps (as per Phil Stooke's post above) that it did manage top soft land, but something went wrong afterwards - if that proved to be the case, would this still count as a successful soft landing I wonder? Though that is kinda a semantic discussion, so maybe not appropriate here.
According to https://spaceflightnow.com/2023/04/25/japanese-company-says-commercial-spacecraft-likely-crashed-on-moon-landing-attempt/ on Spaceflight Now, the lander ran out of fuel while still at altitude, and came down hard from at least 90 meters up.
Looks like this is becoming the accepted conclusion now. The earlier report I saw about landing and taking off must be a misinterpretation.
Now... does this allow us to calculate a crash site? I haven't seen anything about that yet.
Phil
About 17 meter/sec impact velocity, discounting any residual from the descent. Ouch. Edit: The reported (tentatively) rate of drop at 90 meters was 33 km/hour, or about 9 meters a second. So we could be looking at over 26 meters a second on impact - still, well done to the team for getting to 90 meters of the lunar surface and for the hard landing (it's still a landing on the moon!) and all the data returned up to that point. Roll on mission 2!
...waiting for LROC imagery.
Yes indeed. There was an image opportunity only a few hours after landing. Presumably the image was taken, but it did not show the impact. Since we don't really know what went wrong in detail, it's not easy for those of us outside the mission to predict where the crash site should be. Did it overshoot the target? Was it off to one side? Perhaps the mission team have given the LROC people an updated target and we will get an image soon. If not a search might take a while.
Phil
Fascinating report here:
https://amsat-dl.org/en/analysis-of-hakuto-r-spacecraft-landing-on-the-moon-2023-apr-25/
The conclusion is that the lander crashed about 99 km north of Atlas crater (depending on the angle of the final descent. This value assumes a vertical fall).
There will be a statement from ispace on 26 May.
Phil
Impact Site of the HAKUTO-R Mission 1 Lunar Lander.
http://lroc.sese.asu.edu/posts/1302
Not north of the crater as the previous analysis suggested.
Phil
That's right. Scott Tilley also expressed reservations about the analysis:
https://twitter.com/coastal8049/status/1660127118087557126
Phil
https://ispace-inc.com/news-en/?p=4691
As usual for the last few (non-China) landings, a software issue...
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