TOKYO – Japanese startup ispace on Tuesday set a June 6 target touchdown date for its Moon lander, following the success of its rocket “rideshare” buddy, a spacecraft from a US firm.
ispace’s unmanned Resilience lander was launched in January on the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket together with Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost — which aced its lunar landing on Sunday.
Blue Ghost is only the second private mission to achieve the milestone, and the first to do so upright after a separate US company’s lander toppled over on arrival.
Now ispace hopes to have its own moment of glory, after the unsalvageable “hard landing” of its initial attempt in 2023.
“Compared to Mission 1, Mission 2 is progressing as smoothly as can be expected from the moment of launch,” ispace CEO Takeshi Hakamada said in a statement.
“I feel that the experience and knowledge from the previous mission have been put to good use,” he added.
The window for landing is from June 6 to June 8 depending on conditions, according to ispace.
Although Resilience and Blue Ghost shared a rocket, Resilience is taking longer to reach the Moon and will “complete a lunar flyby” and “enter a low energy transfer orbit”, ispace says.