American lunar lander must burn up in Earth’s atmosphere

2024-01-18 18:22:04

The American lunar lander, having failed to reach the Moon due to a fuel leak in flight, must experience a flamboyant end to its mission on Thursday, by voluntarily disintegrating in the Earth’s atmosphere.

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Astrobotic, the start-up that designed the device, positioned the lander “for controlled re-entry” above the water of the South Pacific, it said Thursday on X (formerly Twitter).

The machine, named Peregrine, was still around 48,000 km from Earth on Thursday morning, the company said, publishing a photo of the darkened Earth taken from the moon lander.

The latter took off at the beginning of last week from Florida, but a fuel leak was quickly identified, preventing it from being able to land gently on the Moon as planned.

The lander, however, continued to operate in space, collecting useful flight data for a future attempt, and even allowing experiments to be carried out on board, sent in particular by NASA, such as measuring radiation.

But the company also had to evaluate how to end the mission taking into account the uncertainties linked to the leak, and without risking creating problems for the satellites in Earth orbit, or debris in lunar orbit.

The company announced this weekend that it had made “the difficult decision” to maintain a trajectory directing the lander towards Earth, even if it might perhaps have continued to operate for “weeks”.

“We do not believe Peregrine’s re-entry poses any security risks, and the vessel will burn up in Earth’s atmosphere,” Astrobotic wrote at the time.

The lander is regarding the size of a small golf car.

The company is planning a press conference on Friday to review the entire mission.

Astrobotic was to attempt the first landing of an American device on the Moon in more than 50 years, and the first by a private company.

A Japanese mini-spacecraft must try to land on the Moon during the night from Friday to Saturday Japanese time, which would be a great first for the country.

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