Ispace's Resilience Lander Crashes in Second Moon Landing Attempt
- Japanese company ispace's second lunar mission, Resilience, attempted a landing on the moon's Mare Frigoris region on June 5, 2025, but lost communication during descent.
- The mission followed a low-energy trajectory launched on January 15, but likely crashed after failing to slow from 187 kilometers per hour during the final descent.
- Resilience carried a 340-kilogram lander with multiple payloads, including a six-wheeled rover named Tenacious and an art piece called Moonhouse by Mikael Genberg.
- Ispace CEO Takeshi Hakamada emphasized that since a successful lunar landing seems unlikely at this time, their immediate focus is on quickly examining the telemetry data to determine what went wrong.
- The company concluded the mission ended in a hard landing, adding that it will investigate the cause thoroughly while planning future missions supported by an $80 million Japanese government award.
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156 Articles
Japan’s ispace counts down to second moon-landing attempt on Friday | The Asahi Shimbun Asia & Japan Watch
Japanese startup ispace aims to become the first non-U.S. company to achieve a controlled moon landing as it prepares for the touchdown of its second uncrewed spacecraft on Friday, two years after its inaugural mission ended in failure.
Japan’s ispace fails second private moon landing attempt
A Japanese company trying to land a spacecraft on the moon Friday said that the unmanned lander is believed to have crashed into the lunar surface. The Tokyo-based private space exploration company ispace reported that its Resilience lunar lander successfully initiated its descent onto the moon, but lost communication shortly afterward. Resilience made its descent from 100 kilometers above the moon’s surface to 20 kilometers normally, and its ma…
Japanese rover smashes into Moon in fresh disaster for embattled space company - The Mirror
Japanese company ispace has declared a second failure in a bid for its lunar lander to touchdown on the Moon after communication was lost less than two minutes before the scheduled grounding
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