News

A NASA spacecraft around the moon has photographed the crash site of a Japanese company's lunar lander. NASA released the ...
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has imaged the crash site of Resilience, a moon lander built and operated by the ...
ISpace's private Resilience Lander will attempt to touch down on the Mare Frigoris region of the moon's surface on June 5, at 3:17 p.m. EDT (1817 GMT). While you won’t be able to see the lander ...
The company's Reslience lunar lander will attempt to touch down in Mare Frigoris ("Sea of Cold"), a basalt plain in the ...
Resilience lander fell silent near Mare Frigoris during descent, stalling a mission carrying a NASA rover, art payload, and hydrogen tech demo.
This go-around, the company is aiming to land in a different lunar location: a 750-mile-long (1,200-kilometer) plain called Mare Frigoris — or the “Sea of Cold” — which lies in the moon ...
The region is geologically significant, with surface materials dating back to different lunar epochs, making it a target of ...
Ispace will live stream the landing globally; you can watch the English version here. Mare Frigoris is outlined in blue. Credit: NASA Resilience will land near the center of Mare Frigoris ...
ISpace's private Resilience Lander will attempt to touch down on the Mare Frigoris region of the moon's surface on June 5, at 3:17 p.m. EDT (1817 GMT). While you won’t be able to see the lander itself ...
Resilience, ispace’s second lunar lander, targeted Mare Frigoris, a basaltic plain about 900 km (560 miles) from the moon’s north pole. The company’s live-streamed flight data showed ...
If all went well, the lander would touch down near the center of Mare Frigoris, a lunar sea near the Moon's north pole. But all did not go well. One minute and 45 seconds before Resilience's ...