A private mission to the moon will launch next month to pave the way for humanity’s return to the lunar surface.
Ghost Riders in the Sky – the mission name chosen by US start-up Firefly Aerospace – will target a landing in the Sea of Crisis, a dark patch the size of Britain on the near-side of the moon.
The Blue Ghost lunar lander will carry 10 scientific instruments and technology demonstrations to the surface as part of NASA’s partnership with commercial operators.
Jason Kim, chief executive officer of Firefly Aerospace, said the space agency had paid a fixed price of $101m (£80m) for the mission, a low cost only achievable with technology innovation.
“We believe in a future of a very robust lunar economy,” he said.
“It is the gateway to other planets, like Mars. And so enabling the frequency of very affordable and high science-value missions is what private industry is doing with this first Blue Ghost mission.”
The spacecraft, which is the size of a large shed, will launch from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida in mid-January, or soon after, and take 45 days to reach the moon.
It’ll land autonomously on shock-absorbing feet and short legs to reduce the risk of it toppling over, a fate suffered by Intuitive Machine’s Nova-C spacecraft in the south pole region of the moon last February.
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Mission will study lunar dust
Several of its technology demonstrations are for dealing with regolith, or lunar dust.
A ‘PlanetVac’ will vacuum up and analyse lunar samples and an electromagnetic dust shield…

