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U.S. company Intuitive Machines will attempt today to become the first private company to land on the Moon. Landing target time is 5:30 PM EST. is carrying a number of NASA experiment packages. The NASA broadcast is scheduled to start at 4:00 PM EST.

blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/2024/02

BREAKING ... Intuitive Machines on Zombie Twitter says they adjusted orbit overnight to move up today's lunar landing attempt. They're now targeting 4:24 PM EST / 1:24 PM PST.

The NASA live coverage now begins at 3:00 PM EST / 12:00 PM PST at this YouTube link.

youtube.com/watch?v=Dg2ffigGcY

BREAKING ... Intuitive Machines flight controllers have decided to fly one more orbit before attempting an landing. The new targeted landing time is 6:24 PM EST / 3:24 PM PST. The NASA webcast will now begin at 5:00 PM EST / 2:00 PM PST.

youtube.com/watch?v=Dg2ffigGcY

BREAKING ... The NASA webcast of the Intuitive Machines lunar lander attempt is scheduled to begin in ten minutes at 5:00 PM EST / 2:00 PM PST, at the link. Landing is targeting 6:24 PM EST / 3:24 PM PST.

youtube.com/watch?v=Dg2ffigGcY

Here's the web site for Intuitive Machines, the U.S. company about to attempt the first commercial robotic landing on the surface of the Moon. (1/2)

intuitivemachines.com/

Here's the web site for the NASA Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program, which has been issuing contracts to U.S. private companies to demonstrate the capability to robotically deliver payloads to the lunar surface, part of Project .

This is the natural successor to NASA's commercial cargo and crew programs over the last decade. (2/2)

nasa.gov/commercial-lunar-payl

launched on February 15, 2024 at 1:05 AM EST from Launch Complex 39A, atop a .

This is the launch video, indexed to T-1 minute. If the link doesn't take you there, T-1:00 is at the 54:18 mark.

youtube.com/live/CvdgoX-3WOM?s

An ancestor of the NASA Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program is NextSTEP, which began in 2014 during the administration. The idea was to seek "commercial development of new capabilities for human missions in deep space."

Here we are, ten years later, and a successor to this pioneer program is about to attempt a robotic lunar landing.

More about NextSTEP at the link.

nasa.gov/humans-in-space/nexts

Not to be a Debbie Downer / Gloomy Gus / Eeyore / pick your analogy, but a reminder that is a demonstration mission. The private sector is allowed to fail, to help us move faster overall with the goal of bringing down the cost as well as advancing the U.S. space industry.

Hopefully all goes well, but remember that failure is an option. Other companies will be attempting their own landings in the future.

BREAKING reports there's a problem with the navigation systems, so the lunar lander will use the sensors on NASA's Navigation Doppler LIDAR mounted on the lander.

Public-Private Partnership at its best!

LIDAR is an acronym for Light Detection and Ranging.

Here's a February 5 NASA article about the Navigation Doppler Lidar (NDL). Expect the commentators to refer to NDL in the webcast.

nasa.gov/centers-and-facilitie

This 90-second NASA video about NDL was uploaded to YouTube on February 5. This is the system will use to attempt lunar landing, targeting 6:24 PM EST.

The NASA webcast just said the the default navigation system "is not working."

youtube.com/watch?v=xjx3XhHouK

Anyone who's seen the "Apollo 13" movie knows that the crew used the lunar module as a lifeboat. The LM's descent engine became the primary engine for burns to return to Earth.

is about to use NASA's NDR backup landing navigation test system to replace the lander's non-functioning navigation system.

Steely eyed missile people!

From : NASA Administrator Bill Nelson says the descent burn is targeting 6:00 PM EST, with a landing targeting 6:24 PM EST. If they have to wave off, the next try would be at about 8:30 PM EST. "But that would be the last chance that they would have to land."

(Unclear to me if he means the last chance tonight, or the last chance period.)

cnn.com/us/live-news/nasa-odys

Five minutes until the landing burn. Last chance to go pee. πŸ˜‰

Fun fact ... space reporter Kristin Fisher is the daughter of former NASA astronaut Anna Fisher, the first "mother in space."

The landing burn has begun. As the webcast is reporting, is an "autonomous lunar lander."

On the telecast, former NASA Mae Jemison astronaut is providing commentary along with William Shatner, who spends a lot more time behind the scenes with NASA people than you might suspect. πŸ˜‰

Intuitive Machines reports all is nominal with . Less than six minutes until targeted landing time.

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@WordsmithFL
This is really exciting! My parents got me up to watch the moon landing in '69 when I was 1 year old, and I grew up in the era of John F. Kennedy's dream.

For too many years our space program was neglected. Although I chafe at privatization, I think it is the way forward, and I'm proud to see a U.S. company taking the lead!

@p3R1n01D To be technically accurate, is partnering with the private sector to provide delivery services, to grow our domestic space industry. It's no different from a hundred years ago, when the Post Office hired private airplane companies to deliver air mail; from that came passenger flights.

NASA has gone back to its original role, pioneering new technologies for transfer to the private sector so we can compete globally.

Today's landing is part of CLPS.

nasa.gov/commercial-lunar-payl

@WordsmithFL
I like that even better, thanks for the info!

@p3R1n01D has been working towards this since 2004, although it was the administration that really juiced it. Subsequent administrations tweaked it but it pretty much begins with Obama. I'm writing a book right now about that time.

"Airlines and Air Mail" is a great book about how the Post Office started commercial aviation a century ago. It's not cheap but maybe you can find it used. I referred to it all the time when I was lecturing about "NewSpace."

amazon.com/Airlines-Air-Mail-C

@p3R1n01D P.S. Used copies on eBay starting around $11-$12.

As a Poli Sci and space guy, I loved it. Everything that is happening now, happened before in the 1920s.

I emailed the author years ago, telling him what I did for a living, and how helpful his book was. He thanked me and replied dryly, "It is not a best-seller." 🀣

@WordsmithFL
LOL! 🀣 I bet he loved the feedback! At those prices I might pick one up, it's the sort of thing I'd read sooner or later.

@p3R1n01D Having spoken with the people driving the Obama-era space policy, I know they were inspired by what the Post Office did in the 1920s with commercial aviation. In the 1920s, they were inspired by how the federal government helped support the transcontinental railroads by acquiring the rights-of-way. There's plenty of historical precedent.

NASA's predecessor, the NACA, was founded in 1915 because Europe was way ahead of us in aviation. Their governments were investing, we were not.

@WordsmithFL
I've never heard of the NACA, that's interesting! But that's the key at all stages, he have to invest.

And that path really makes sense, too. It's impractical, impossible in this case, to try to do everything in-house. Computer manufacturers don't make their own chips, for example.

If this is a taste of what's in your book, I can't wait!

@p3R1n01D The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) invested government dollars in developing aviation technology that could be passed on to the private sector.

After Sputnik, Congress decided that the U.S. needed a space version of the NACA, so they created NASA, which began October 1, 1958. NASA absorbed the NACA and various civilian space research programs from the Defense Department.

JFK turned NASA into a propaganda organ for national and global prestige, another story. 😊

@p3R1n01D One more point and I'll shut up ...

Columbus's 1492 voyage is a very early analogy for today's NewSpace. Isabella hired Columbus and three privately owned sailing ships to demonstrate that using westerly winds could reach China faster.

(North America was in the way, but they didn't know that.)

If Columbus succeeded, he could name himself governor of any lands he discovered and keep a percentage of any treasures.

If he failed, or didn't come back, he wasn't paid.

Same principle.

@WordsmithFL
I remember now how things were really looking up during the Obama era, he really was a champion of the cause. I'm hoping we'll see another good era of advancement!

That book sounds fascinating, thanks for the link! I just acquired gigabytes worth of reading on machine learning, so I may be tied up for the next year or so. πŸ˜‰

Be sure to let us know when your book is available for pre-release purchase! I'll boost every post you write about it.

@p3R1n01D Thank you ... I know what you mean about a stack of content to read.

I recently found this video which really is the seminal moment. April 15, 2010, Obama tours Launch Complex 40 with Elon. SpaceX had yet to launch a Falcon 9. Elon gave Obama a tour; the first rocket was on the pad. You can overhear much of the conversation. The tour ends with Obama pledging to support commercial space.

It was just posted in June, so it's a huge find.

youtube.com/watch?v=CKY4DwTDxk

@WordsmithFL more than likely last chance today. They would need the orbit to sync up with the landing location due to Delta-V issues

@Kinnison I hope so. Waiting for official confirmation. We'll find out at 6:10 PM EST.

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