Dubai Telegraph - US firm hours away from Moon landing with drill, rovers, drone

EUR -
AED 3.965837
AFN 78.744129
ALL 99.172606
AMD 426.073774
ANG 1.946155
AOA 984.790713
ARS 1148.51239
AUD 1.7026
AWG 1.946366
AZN 1.858333
BAM 1.955709
BBD 2.180358
BDT 131.202647
BGN 1.951012
BHD 0.407017
BIF 3199.031851
BMD 1.079814
BND 1.438793
BOB 7.461305
BRL 6.228803
BSD 1.079819
BTN 94.004991
BWP 14.782761
BYN 3.533937
BYR 21164.363962
BZD 2.169118
CAD 1.544653
CDF 3105.545924
CHF 0.953994
CLF 0.026169
CLP 1004.216495
CNY 7.829841
CNH 7.823456
COP 4430.79199
CRC 544.459405
CUC 1.079814
CUP 28.615084
CVE 110.258821
CZK 25.026853
DJF 191.904412
DKK 7.459488
DOP 67.455595
DZD 144.204331
EGP 54.725431
ERN 16.197217
ETB 135.025732
FJD 2.473897
FKP 0.839719
GBP 0.837385
GEL 3.00206
GGP 0.839719
GHS 16.737442
GIP 0.839719
GMD 77.208014
GNF 9337.476734
GTQ 8.33107
GYD 225.921063
HKD 8.391832
HNL 27.611453
HRK 7.535814
HTG 141.790741
HUF 399.371007
IDR 17629.591236
ILS 3.894675
IMP 0.839719
INR 93.988835
IQD 1414.607626
IRR 45473.685934
ISK 146.89771
JEP 0.839719
JMD 169.282081
JOD 0.766019
JPY 159.591721
KES 139.458267
KGS 94.421573
KHR 4331.596803
KMF 498.873679
KPW 971.764914
KRW 1563.465254
KWD 0.332777
KYD 0.899887
KZT 536.400005
LAK 23397.255475
LBP 96753.393926
LKR 319.156203
LRD 215.973897
LSL 19.800374
LTL 3.188412
LVL 0.653169
LYD 5.213708
MAD 10.538109
MDL 19.706527
MGA 5023.578914
MKD 61.370719
MMK 2266.291392
MNT 3747.751071
MOP 8.644635
MRU 43.021589
MUR 48.861623
MVR 16.625699
MWK 1872.443048
MXN 21.920612
MYR 4.780882
MZN 69.011197
NAD 19.800007
NGN 1623.965482
NIO 39.738141
NOK 11.748052
NPR 150.407785
NZD 1.87972
OMR 0.415719
PAB 1.079819
PEN 3.942079
PGK 4.409569
PHP 61.929552
PKR 302.143972
PLN 4.175373
PYG 8537.600624
QAR 3.935879
RON 4.973196
RSD 117.113423
RUB 96.111094
RWF 1548.270221
SAR 4.050899
SBD 9.117389
SCR 15.475574
SDG 648.968869
SEK 10.982123
SGD 1.438567
SHP 0.848565
SLE 24.674099
SLL 22643.175992
SOS 617.148269
SRD 38.603348
STD 22349.979762
SVC 9.448471
SYP 14039.600809
SZL 19.793524
THB 36.364947
TJS 11.770313
TMT 3.779351
TND 3.350426
TOP 2.529036
TRY 39.32058
TTD 7.330453
TWD 35.526432
TZS 2845.311229
UAH 44.529505
UGX 3966.814438
USD 1.079814
UYU 46.007422
UZS 13950.218238
VES 69.505081
VND 27546.067586
VUV 134.742569
WST 3.07421
XAF 655.908095
XAG 0.033021
XAU 0.00037
XCD 2.918253
XDR 0.814517
XOF 655.920243
XPF 119.331742
YER 266.5525
ZAR 19.593668
ZMK 9719.571374
ZMW 31.126679
ZWL 347.699825
  • RBGPF

    1.8200

    66.67

    +2.73%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    8.97

    -0.67%

  • GSK

    0.4200

    39.23

    +1.07%

  • AZN

    -0.5450

    77.415

    -0.7%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.17

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -1.3450

    59.545

    -2.26%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    11.49

    +0.52%

  • RIO

    -0.0400

    63.71

    -0.06%

  • BTI

    0.3050

    39.985

    +0.76%

  • RELX

    -1.3650

    47.175

    -2.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    23.49

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    0.5200

    24.23

    +2.15%

  • BP

    -0.2250

    31.655

    -0.71%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    10.31

    -3.1%

  • BCC

    0.2350

    100.555

    +0.23%

  • JRI

    -0.1500

    12.73

    -1.18%

US firm hours away from Moon landing with drill, rovers, drone
US firm hours away from Moon landing with drill, rovers, drone / Photo: HANDOUT - Intuitive Machines, LLC/AFP

US firm hours away from Moon landing with drill, rovers, drone

A drill for ice, a 4G network test, three rovers, and a hopping drone: a US company is hours away from its second lunar landing attempt on Thursday, aiming to advance technologies for future human missions.

Text size:

Houston-based Intuitive Machines, which made history last year as the first private firm to land on the Moon, is targeting a 12:32 pm ET (1732 GMT) touchdown at Mons Mouton, a point nearer the lunar south pole than any robot has ever ventured.

The 15.6-foot (4.8-meter), hexagonal Athena lander -- about the height of a giraffe -- began its descent maneuver earlier, with a webcast set to begin an hour before landing.

Intuitive Machines' milestone landing in February 2024 was partly marred by the lander tipping onto its side -- an outcome the company hopes to avoid repeating.

For the final and trickiest phase, known as terminal descent, Athena will be relying on an Inertial Measurement Unit that senses acceleration, as its cameras and lasers are obscured by lunar dust kicked up by its engines.

"Terminal descent is like walking towards a door and closing your eyes the last three feet. You know you're close enough, but your inner ear must lead you through the door," the company said.

Pressure is high after Texas-based Firefly Aerospace successfully put its Blue Ghost lander on the Moon on Sunday.

Both missions are part of NASA's $2.6-billion CLPS program, designed to partner with private companies to reduce costs and support Artemis -- the effort to return astronauts to the Moon and, eventually, Mars.

- A hopper named Grace -

Athena is targeting highland terrain about 100 miles (160 kilometers) from the Moon's south pole, where it will deploy three rovers and a unique hopping drone named Grace, after late computer science pioneer Grace Hopper.

One of Grace's boldest objectives is a hop into a permanently shadowed crater, a place where sunlight has never shone -- a first for humanity.

While NASA's Ingenuity helicopter proved flight is possible on Mars, the Moon's lack of atmosphere makes traditional flying impossible, positioning hoppers like Grace as a key technology for future exploration.

MAPP, the largest of Athena's rovers and roughly the size of a beagle, will assist in testing a Nokia Bell Labs 4G cellular network linking the lander, itself, and Grace -- technology designed to one day integrate into astronaut spacesuits.

Yaoki, a more compact rover from Japanese company Dymon, is designed to survive drops in any orientation, making it highly adaptable.

Meanwhile, the tiny AstroAnt rover, equipped with magnetic wheels, will cling to MAPP and use its sensors to measure temperature variations on the larger robot.

Also aboard Athena is PRIME-1, a NASA instrument carrying a drill to search for ice and other chemicals beneath the lunar surface, paired with a spectrometer to analyze its findings.

- Sticking the landing -

Before any experiments can begin, Intuitive Machines must stick the landing -- a challenge made harder by the Moon's lack of atmosphere, which rules out parachutes and forces spacecraft to rely on precise thrusts and navigation over hazardous terrain.

Until Intuitive Machines' first mission, only national space agencies had achieved the feat, with NASA's last landing dating back to Apollo 17 in 1972.

The company's first lander, Odysseus, came in too fast, caught a foot on the surface and toppled over, cutting the mission short when its solar panels could not generate enough power.

This time, the company has made critical upgrades, including better cabling for the laser altimeter, which provides altitude and velocity readings to ensure a safe touchdown.

Athena launched last Wednesday aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, which also carried NASA's Lunar Trailblazer probe -- but not everything has gone smoothly.

Ground controllers are struggling to re-establish contact with the small satellite, designed to map the Moon's water distribution.

These missions come at a delicate time for NASA, amid speculation that the agency may scale back or even cancel the crewed Moon missions in favor of prioritizing Mars -- a goal championed by President Donald Trump and his advisor Elon Musk.

A.El-Sewedy--DT