A second commercially-built moon lander, this one built by Houston-based Intuitive Machines, landed near the moon's south pole Thursday, but telemetry indicated it ended up on its side.
Intuitive Machines’ Athena lunar lander is dead, just one day after it touched down at the moon’s south pole and tipped over. Luckily, the company says it was able to “accelerate several ...
A private lunar lander, developed by Texas-based Intuitive Machines, was declared dead on Friday, hours after landing sideways in a crater near the Moon’s south pole, the company confirmed.
Nasa's Athena moon lander, developed by Intuitive Machines, is set to land near the lunar south pole today, beginning a critical 10-day mission for the Artemis program. The lander will study lunar ...
A dramatic photograph from Intuitive Machines' Athena moon lander shows it touched down Thursday in a crater near the lunar south pole and tipped over on its side. Given a low sun angle and the ...
This Blue Moon lander is not designed to carry people, but it will test systems for a forthcoming version of the spacecraft that is to be used to take NASA astronauts to the surface of the moon ...
You may like Intuitive Machines' private Athena probe lands near lunar south pole — but it may have tipped over Private Athena moon lander beams home amazing video of south pole touchdown site ...
Shares of space-exploration company Intuitive Machines Inc. are sliding after the company’s uncrewed Nova-C lander, called Athena, ran into difficulties when it landed on the surface of the Moon ...
A dramatic photograph from Intuitive Machines' Athena moon lander shows it touched down Thursday in a crater near the lunar south pole and tipped over on its side. Given a low sun angle and the ...
Update: Intuitive Machines announced on 7 March that the Athena spacecraft had landed on its side in a lunar crater and has run out of power. The mission is over, because it has no way to recharge ...
The Athena lander is effectively dead. Intuitive Machines confirms that it ran out of energy after failing to stick its landing on the Moon. "Images downlinked from Athena on the lunar surface ...
Danielle Kaye contributed reporting. An earlier version of this article misstated how far the Athena moon lander was from its targeted landing site. It was about 800 feet, not 150 miles.