Firefly Aerospace’s first lunar lander will shuttle 10 NASA payloads to the moon

New year, new lunar lander: this time, from Firefly Aerospace on its first mission to the moon.

The Blue Ghost Lunar Lander Mission 1, dubbed “Ghost Rider in the Sky,” is set to launch on January 15 atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center for a 60-day operation to Mare Crisium, a 300-mile-wide basin in the northeast sector of the moon’s near side. The solar-powered lander will deliver 10 NASA payloads that will gather more information about deep space and lunar environments to enable larger, heavier payloads and eventually crewed missions to the moon.

NASA is using the mission “as an opportunity to learn more about the internal structure of the moon and Earth’s magnetosphere, and [to] test technologies that will aid in improving both robotic and human exploration missions to the lunar surface,” says Ryan Watkins, program scientist in NASA’s Exploration Science Strategy and Integration Office. (Catch the launch livestream here and ">here, with mission updates here.)

Mare Crisium [Photo: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University]

The science experiments and technology demonstrations will operate during the 45-day journey featuring several orbits around the Earth and moon, and 14 days (or one lunar day) on the surface. They include testing a radiation-tolerant computer and leveraging GPS and similar satellite navigation systems for positioning, navigation, and timing around the moon.

X-ray imaging of Earth’s magnetosphere will gauge how solar wind affects its magnetic field to better inform weather predictions, GPS protection, and satellite connectivity. Stereoscopic cameras will capture the plume interaction upon descent. Subsurface drilling, sample collection and analysis, and measuring local electromagnetic fields will help characterize surface and interior composition and heat flow.

Other payloads will study how lunar dust adheres to various materials and use electromagnetism to mitigate or prevent dust buildup on mechanical components.

[Image: Firefly Aerospace]

“The landing site was chosen because it avoids large magnetic anomalies on the lunar surface that could disrupt some of our payload measurements,” Watkins says.

The mission is part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative offering fixed contracts to commercial partners. CLPS awarded Firefly $93.3 million in 2021 (later upped to ">$101 million) to craft the lander—a four-legged vehicle standing 6.6 feet high and 11.5 feet in diameter, with a 340-pound cargo capacity that will shuttle the most payloads for a CLPS mission thus far.

The technologies come from several U.S. space companies and universities and three NASA centers, with contributions from the Italian Space Agency. Firefly will manage the mission from its headquarters in Cedar Park, Texas, near Austin, concluding it by capturing a solar eclipse and a lunar sunset in HD video.

Firefly employees and investor names grace the spacecraft. “To have your name associated with a vehicle that’s going to land on the moon and stay there is quite inspirational,” says CEO Jason Kim.

[Photo: Firefly Aerospace]

The space transportation firm was founded in 2017 and is now valued at $2 billion. It has also won CLPS task orders for $112 million to study the radio-quiet far side of the moon in 2026 and $179.6 million to deliver six NASA experiments to the Gruithuisen Domes region on the near side of the moon in 2028.

“It just shows that the private industry, the commercial world, has a lot of affordable, responsive technology and systems that could provide NASA a frequent means to go to the moon and carry out all these high-stakes critical-science missions for lower cost as well as do it sustainably,” says Kim.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91259672/firefly-aerospaces-first-lunar-lander-will-shuttle-10-nasa-payloads-to-the-moon?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 17h | 14 gen 2025, 12:10:04


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Biden issues executive order to advance AI infrastructure

President Joe Biden on Tuesday signed an ambitious executive order on

15 gen 2025, 01:50:07 | Fast company - tech
Tech leaders face a fork in the AI road: Build or buy?

Recently, I was invited to speak on stage at Insight Partner’s ScaleUp:AI conference for a panel aptly titled “Build versus Buy.” It shouldn’t be a surprise that this was a topic of discussion; Af

15 gen 2025, 01:50:07 | Fast company - tech
Is Art Basel’s AI embrace a turning point for the art world?

When “Théâtre D’opéra Spatial,” an AI-generated artwork, won first prize

15 gen 2025, 01:50:05 | Fast company - tech
AI slop is still distorting news about the L.A. wildfires

A firefighter emerges from the flames, a bear cub tucked under each arm. Another, in full protective gear, carries a tiny puppy away from the inferno. A third cradles a baby deer close to their ch

14 gen 2025, 21:20:05 | Fast company - tech
A new movement wants to protect social media from billionaires

Over the past few years, concerns about billionaires using media outlets they own to signal boost their own beliefs has become a growing concern. Jeff Bezos owns the Washington Post. Elon

14 gen 2025, 21:20:03 | Fast company - tech
The AOL experience is still kicking in 2025

AOL is alive and well.

Decades after its heyday, AOL offers a subscription-based browser called AOL Desktop Gold, priced at $6.99 per month. While no longer tied to dial-up internet, it

14 gen 2025, 19:10:01 | Fast company - tech