Breaking: Intuitive Machines Odysseus lunar lander successfully lands on Moon and becomes first private company to do so

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photo showing part of a silver and gold spacecraft with the sphere of earth and the blackness of space in the background.

Intuitive Machines' Odysseus moon lander beamed home this selfie on Feb. 16, 2024, a day after launching atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. (Image credit: Intuitive Machines via X
A pioneering moon lander has beamed home its first photos from the final frontier.


Intuitive Machines' robotic Odysseus spacecraft snapped a few selfies with Earth in the background shortly after its Feb. 15 launch atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket — and we can all check them out.


"Intuitive Machines successfully transmitted its first IM-1 mission images to Earth on February 16, 2024. The images were captured shortly after separation from @SpaceX's second stage on Intuitive Machines' first journey to the moon under @NASA's CLPS initiative," the Houston-based company wrote Saturday (Feb. 17) in a post on X that shared four of the photos.

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CLPS is the Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, which puts agency science instruments on private robotic moon landers like Odysseus. These instruments are designed to collect data that will aid NASA's Artemis program, which aims to establish a crewed base near the lunar south pole by the end of the 2020s.


Odysseus is carrying six NASA experiments and technology demonstrations, along with six private payloads, on its current IM-1 mission.

IM-1 wasn't the first CLPS effort to get off the ground. That distinction goes to the debut flight of Peregrine, a moon lander built by Pittsburgh company Astrobotic, which launched last month atop a United Launch Alliance Vulcan Centaur rocket.

That launch went well, but Peregrine suffered a fuel leak shortly after separating from the rocket's upper stage. The lander couldn't reach the moon, so its handlers steered it to a controlled destruction in Earth's atmosphere on Jan. 18.


closeup of a spacecraft selfie showing gray and gold-wrapped components, with the curve of earth and the distant sun in the background.


Another selfie, apparently taken with a fisheye lens, that Odysseus beamed home on Feb. 16, 2024. (Image credit: Intuitive Machines via X)
Things have been going better for Odysseus. The lander is healthy and communicating with mission control as it heads toward the moon for a planned Feb. 22 touchdown attempt, Intuitive Machines has said.

Odysseus' various systems are performing normally, including its engine, which just aced a crucial checkout in deep space.

"Intuitive Machines flight controllers successfully fired the first liquid methane and liquid oxygen engine in space, completing the IM-1 mission engine commissioning. This engine firing included a full thrust mainstage engine burn and throttle down-profile necessary to land on the moon," the company said in an X post on Friday evening (Feb. 16).

Success on the upcoming landing try would be historic; no private spacecraft has ever touched down softly on the moon.

Odysseus' liquid methane-liquid oxygen combination, by the way, is also employed by SpaceX's Raptor engines, which power the company's giant new Starship rocket. Starship, which SpaceX is developing to get people to the moon and Mars, is being prepped for its third test flight, which could take place in the coming weeks.
 
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Odysseus is now orbiting the Moon! Lunar landing attempt tomorrow afternoon!
 
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intuitive stream
 
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Congrats!!
 
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Boom!!
 
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US returns to lunar surface with for first time in over 50 years​


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One giant tumble for mankind! NASA confirms $118 million Odysseus lunar aircraft has TIPPED OVER onto its side after failed landing on the moon

By Stacy Liberatore For Dailymail.com and Reuters17:36 EST 23 Feb 2024 , updated 18:27 EST 23 Feb 2024

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  • Odysseus is believed to be laying horizontal on the lunar surface after landing
  • Intuitive Machines said the 'soft landing' was based on old data
NASA has confirmed that the first private owned spacecraft to land on the moon has 'tipped over on its side' - but is 'alive and well.'

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Anyway congrats.
 

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