US sets date for first Moon landing in 50 years

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania - More than 50 years after the last Apollo space mission, the United States will try once again to land a craft on the Moon on January 25, said the head of what could be the first private company to successfully touch down on the lunar surface.

Astronaut Buzz Aldrin poses for a photograph beside the deployed United States flag during an Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity on the lunar surface in 1969.
Astronaut Buzz Aldrin poses for a photograph beside the deployed United States flag during an Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity on the lunar surface in 1969.  © NASA

The lander, named Peregrine, will have no one on board. It was developed by American company Astrobotic, whose CEO John Thornton said it will carry NASA instruments to study the lunar environment in anticipation of NASA's Artemis manned missions.

Several years ago, NASA opted to commission US companies to send scientific experiments and technologies to the Moon – a program called CLPS.

These fixed-price contracts should make it possible to develop a lunar economy and provide transport services at a lower cost.

"One of the big challenges of what we're attempting here is attempting a launch and landing on the surface Moon for a fraction of what it would otherwise cost," said Thornton Wednesday at a press briefing at his company's base in Pittsburgh.

"Only about half of the missions that have gone to the surface of the Moon have been successful," he said.

"So it's certainly a daunting challenge. I'm going to be terrified and thrilled all at once at every stage of this."

Astrobiotic hopes to be the first private company to successfully land on the moon

Takeshi Hakamada, CEO of Japanese firm ispace, holds a press conference to describe his company's lunar lander and rover for their lunar program Hakuto-R in Tokyo on September 26, 2018.
Takeshi Hakamada, CEO of Japanese firm ispace, holds a press conference to describe his company's lunar lander and rover for their lunar program Hakuto-R in Tokyo on September 26, 2018.  © Natsuko FUKUE / AFP

Takeoff is scheduled for December 24 from Florida aboard the inaugural flight of the new rocket from the ULA industrial group, named Vulcan Centaur.

The probe will then take "a few days" to reach lunar orbit, but will have to wait until January 25 before attempting landing, so that light conditions at the target location are right, Thornton said.

The descent will be carried out autonomously, without human intervention, but will be monitored from the company's control center.

In the spring, the Japanese start-up ispace had already attempted to become the first private company to land on the Moon, but the mission ended in a crash. Israel also suffered a setback in 2019.

Only four countries have successfully landed on the Moon: the United States, Russia, China, and, most recently, India.

In addition to Astrobotic, NASA has signed contracts with other companies, such as Firefly Aerospace, Draper, and Intuitive Machines.

Intuitive Machines is due to take off aboard a SpaceX rocket in January.

"NASA leadership is aware of the risks and has accepted that some of these missions might not succeed," said Chris Culbert, the CLPS program manager.

"But even if every landing isn't successful, CLPS already had an impact on the commercial infrastructure needed to establish a lunar economy," he said.

With its Artemis program, NASA wants to establish a base on the surface of the Moon.

Cover photo: NASA

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