Intuitive Machines - IM-1 - Moon Mission Lander

Intuitive Machines - IM-1 - Moon Mission Lander

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Discussion

Russ35

Original Poster:

2,561 posts

246 months

Wednesday 21st February
quotequote all
Not seen anything mention but on the 15th Feb SpaceX launched a moon lander from Intuitive Machines.

It completed its orbit insertion burn this morning, so currently in a 92km orbit with an expected landing tomorrow (22nd
Feb) around 9pm.

Some info about the mission and 12 payloads (6 from NASA) its carrying

Eric Mc

122,854 posts

272 months

Wednesday 21st February
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Thanks for starting the thread. Hope things work out better than the last US attempt.

Beati Dogu

9,191 posts

146 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Fingers crossed.

You wait 50 years (not literally) and all of a sudden everyone is sending moon landers again.

NASA TV will have the landing livestream later today from 14:00 cst (8pm UK time).

Estimated landing time will be at 15:24 CST (9:24 pm UK time)

Or same footage streamed here:

https://www.intuitivemachines.com/im-1







Russ35

Original Poster:

2,561 posts

246 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Their doing an extra orbit so now around 10pm

RichB

52,745 posts

291 months

Thursday 22nd February
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ANyone else watching this? Due to land in about 9 mins. scratchchin

Dog Star

16,482 posts

175 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Looks like they’ve lost it.

ETA - “signs of life”?

Edited by Dog Star on Thursday 22 February 23:34

Timothy Bucktu

15,690 posts

207 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Has it 'gone missing'? Ohh...they just mentioned Goonhilly - I went there last year.

RichB

52,745 posts

291 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Yep, not much to see was there... frown
I'm off to bed.

Timothy Bucktu

15,690 posts

207 months

Thursday 22nd February
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Faint signal located...

Terminator X

16,309 posts

211 months

Friday 23rd February
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Not quite like 1969 then ... still that's 55 years of progress for you.

TX.

Pupp

12,357 posts

279 months

Friday 23rd February
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Intuitive Machines: US company makes historic Moon landing https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-683...


Seems like they’ve made it work… overcoming some significant issues on the way.

Hope the dusty old rock gives up some secrets to reward the effort!

durbster

10,735 posts

229 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
I gave up and went to sleep when they lost contact as it was looking like it'd crashed on landing, so I was quite pleased to wake up and see it's upright and communicating. smile

SpudLink

6,440 posts

199 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
Pupp said:
Intuitive Machines: US company makes historic Moon landing https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-683...


Seems like they’ve made it work… overcoming some significant issues on the way.

Hope the dusty old rock gives up some secrets to reward the effort!
Indeed.

BBC said:
Controllers had to deal with an almost mission-stopping technical problem even before the descent began.

Odysseus' ranging lasers, which were supposed to calculate the craft's altitude and velocity, weren't working properly.

Fortunately, there were some experimental lasers from Nasa on board, and engineers were able to patch these across to the navigation computers.
So the NASA lasers weren't just cargo. I assumed they were sending experiments that would be carried out on landing. This suggests NASA had were using this to test the systems that will be used for landings in the future.

Eric Mc

122,854 posts

272 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
Not quite like 1969 then ... still that's 55 years of progress for you.

TX.
It's a lot harder without a human on board looking out the window with their hands on a throttle and joystick.

durbster

10,735 posts

229 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
SpudLink said:
Pupp said:
Intuitive Machines: US company makes historic Moon landing https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-683...


Seems like they’ve made it work… overcoming some significant issues on the way.

Hope the dusty old rock gives up some secrets to reward the effort!
Indeed.

BBC said:
Controllers had to deal with an almost mission-stopping technical problem even before the descent began.

Odysseus' ranging lasers, which were supposed to calculate the craft's altitude and velocity, weren't working properly.

Fortunately, there were some experimental lasers from Nasa on board, and engineers were able to patch these across to the navigation computers.
So the NASA lasers weren't just cargo. I assumed they were sending experiments that would be carried out on landing. This suggests NASA had were using this to test the systems that will be used for landings in the future.
What actually happened was somebody at NASA realised the Intuitive Machines lasers would fail but didn't want to hurt their feelings, so came up with a way to solve it without upsetting anyone. biggrin

RichB

52,745 posts

291 months

Friday 23rd February
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Eric Mc said:
Terminator X said:
Not quite like 1969 then ... still that's 55 years of progress for you.
TX.
It's a lot harder without a human on board looking out the window with their hands on a throttle and joystick.
True, but you'd think 55 years on they could get a camara to work. hehe

After all the hype about the heli-cam (or whatever it was) that was meant to be launched at 30m alt. to video it landing. Even a few cameras strapped to the sides of the module could have sent something but as it was it was a damp squib.

Dog Star

16,482 posts

175 months

Friday 23rd February
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The more this silence goes on the more I’m becoming convinced that this has failed and we are just getting a load of guff about “faint signals”; even back in the days of Ranger missions sixty years ago you’d get an image going in. We get images from Mars landers sent basically on touchdown. Here: nothing. I’d expect pretty well realtime imagery.

Shame as it was a professional looking setup. I think we will all be let down gently over the next couple of days, it’s perhaps been very badly damaged on landing , but it’ll be hailed as a big triumph, first soft landing since A17 etc. I’m sure that IMs soaring stock price will be a big driver for this.

Eric Mc

122,854 posts

272 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
RichB said:
Eric Mc said:
Terminator X said:
Not quite like 1969 then ... still that's 55 years of progress for you.
TX.
It's a lot harder without a human on board looking out the window with their hands on a throttle and joystick.
True, but you'd think 55 years on they could get a camara to work. hehe

After all the hype about the heli-cam (or whatever it was) that was meant to be launched at 30m alt. to video it landing. Even a few cameras strapped to the sides of the module could have sent something but as it was it was a damp squib.
You do realise that there were no live images transmitted by the Apollo Lunar Module during the descent and landing phase?

Live TV from the moon only began when the astronauts activated the external TV camera to capture themselves coming down the ladder. Once they were on the surface, they detached the camera and, on Apollos 11,12 and 14, put it on a tripod or, in the case of Apollos 15,16 and 17, put it on the Lunar Rover.

Dog Star

16,482 posts

175 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
You do realise that there were no live images transmitted by the Apollo Lunar Module during the descent and landing phase?
This is 2023.

Every single unmanned Mars or lunar lander I can remember (actually add Venus to that) has got an image back pronto. It’s good PR.

We were told by the IM team we’d get images after a couple of minutes. They had the fancy landing cam setup.


Terminator X

16,309 posts

211 months

Friday 23rd February
quotequote all
durbster said:
I gave up and went to sleep when they lost contact as it was looking like it'd crashed on landing, so I was quite pleased to wake up and see it's upright and communicating. smile
Are there any images of it landing / landed? When I watched last night they had lost contact and just celebrated when someone said it had landed!

TX.