Skip to main content

Odysseus shares new moon images ahead of imminent landing attempt

Intuitive Machines' Odysseus spacecraft ahead of its lunar landing attempt.
Intuitive Machines

Texas-based Intuitive Machines is on course to perform the first successful soft lunar landing by a commercial company, as well as the first U.S. moon landing since the final Apollo mission more than five decades ago.

Recommended Videos

But, as the company said in a message on social media, “The landing opportunity will be Odysseus’ hardest challenge yet.”

The uncrewed Odysseus spacecraft successfully entered a lunar orbit on Wednesday, putting it on a path for a landing attempt on Thursday at 3:30 p.m. ET.

The company released a dramatic image (below) on Wednesday showing the spacecraft’s destination tantalizingly close, just 57 miles (92 kilometers) above the lunar surface.

Odysseus passes over the near side of the Moon following lunar orbit insertion on 21FEB2024. The lander continues to be in excellent health in lunar orbit.
(21FEB2024 1608 CST) pic.twitter.com/UX4kgkv5EW

— Intuitive Machines (@Int_Machines) February 21, 2024

“Odysseus completed its scheduled 408-second main engine lunar orbit insertion burn,” Intuitive Machines said. “Initial data indicates the 800 m/s burn was completed within 2 m/s accuracy.”

It added that Odysseus continues to be in excellent health and that “over the next day, while the lander remains in lunar orbit, flight controllers will analyze the complete flight data and transmit imagery of the moon.”

That includes the picture below captured by Odysseus’ Terrain Relative Navigation camera showing the Bel’kovich K crater in the moon’s northern equatorial highlands. “It is an approximate 50-kilometer-in-diameter [31-mile-in-diameter] crater with mountains in the center, made when the crater was formed,” the company said.

Odysseus’ Terrain Relative Navigation camera captured this image of the Bel’kovich K crater in the Moon’s northern equatorial highlands.

It is an approximate 50 km diameter crater with mountains in the center, made when the crater was formed.
(21FEB2024 1750 CST) pic.twitter.com/0egu0NOrKP

— Intuitive Machines (@Int_Machines) February 21, 2024

The IM-1 mission, which is part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program, launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida last week and is carrying with it 12 science and technology payloads for NASA and other organizations.

NASA will live stream Thursday’s highly anticipated landing attempt and Digital Trends has all the information you need to watch it.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch this Chinese spacecraft land on the far side of the moon
China's Chang'e-6 probe heading toward the lunar surface in June 2024.

Chang’e-6 landing (Onboard Camera View)

China has released some remarkable footage showing its Chang’e 6 spacecraft making a touchdown on the far side of the moon.

Read more
NASA eyes levitating robot train for the moon
Artist concept of novel approach proposed by a 2024 NIAC Phase II awardee for possible future missions depicting lunar surface with planet Earth on the horizon.

An artist's concept of novel approach proposed by a 2024 NIAC Phase II awardee for possible future missions depicting lunar surface with planet Earth on the horizon. NASA/Ethan Schaler

NASA is exploring the idea of building a railway on the lunar surface that uses levitating robots to provide “reliable, autonomous, and efficient payload transport on the moon.”

Read more
China confirms target date for landing taikonauts on the moon
The lunar surface.

China has successfully reached the lunar surface three times up till now, but none of the missions involved humans setting foot there.

The Asian giant is planning to change that, however, as officials at the China Manned Space Engineering Office (CMSEO) confirmed this week that it’s on track to put its first taikonauts on the lunar surface before the end of this decade.

Read more