NASA

First Full Successful NASA CLPS Lunar Lander Set To End Mission

A solar eclipse as seen from the lunar surface by Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost Mission 1 lander on March 14, 2025
A solar eclipse as seen from the lunar surface by Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 lander on March 14, 2025
Photo: Firefly Aerospace

The first fully successful lunar lander mission in the NASA CLPS program is nearly complete. Lunar sunset at Mare Crisium is expected on March 16, 2025, and without sunlight to power the vehicle’s solar panels, the operations of Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 will end.

This morning on X.com, Firefly Aerospace said

Notably, the last major act of the lander will be to “capture the sunset glow and dust levitation seen by the Apollo 17 astronauts as they were leaving the Moon.” If Firefly engineers are able to capture that rare and only once-seen phenomena, it will be a fitting finale for a thoroughly successful mission.

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Dylan Thomas

Sunset On The Moon Is A Very Strange Time There

During the Apollo 17 mission, astronauts observed a faint light near the Moon’s horizon during sunrise and sunset, known as lunar horizon glow. This phenomenon is attributed to the electrostatic levitation of lunar dust particles.

On the Moon’s daylit side, solar ultraviolet and X-ray radiation can cause dust particles to become positively charged, leading them to repel from the surface and rise to altitudes ranging from meters to kilometers.

Conversely, on the night side, dust particles acquire a negative charge due to interactions with the solar wind. At the lunar terminator—the dividing line between day and night—intense electric fields may develop, resulting in horizontal dust transport, sometimes referred to as “Moon storms.”

Blue Ghost will attempt to further measure this phenomenon, as it has only been witnessed once, and that some fifty-three years ago.

This Just After A Solar Eclipse

Two days ago, Blue Ghost captured a solar eclipse, albeit the the first one recorded from the lunar surface — on Earth, a lunar eclipse was underway, and the Earth’s shadow was darkening the face of the moon for observers on the ground.

Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 successfully landed on the Moon on March 2, 2025, at 3:34 a.m. EST, near Mons Latreille within the Mare Crisium basin. This mission, part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative, delivered ten NASA science and technology instruments to the lunar surface.

irefly's Blue Ghost 1 lander in lunar orbit in February, 2025.
Firefly’s Blue Ghost 1 lander in lunar orbit in February, 2025.
Photo: Firefly Aerospace

Among the payloads, the Lunar PlanetVac (LPV) successfully collected, transferred, and sorted lunar soil using pressurized nitrogen gas. The Electrodynamic Dust Shield (EDS) operated effectively, demonstrating potential applications in mitigating lunar dust accumulation on various surfaces.

The Next Generation Lunar Retroreflectors (NGLR) provided precise measurements of the Earth-Moon distance, contributing to our understanding of the lunar interior and fundamental physics. The Reconfigurable, Radiation-Tolerant Computer System (RadPC) demonstrated resilience to the Moon’s radiation environment, marking a significant step in developing robust computing technologies for space missions.


Blue Ghost Mission 1 cast its shadow on the lunar surface in March 2025
Blue Ghost Mission 1 cast its shadow on the lunar surface in March 2025
Photo: Firefly Aerospace

The Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment (LuGRE) successfully received GPS and Galileo signals at lunar distances, proving the viability of using these systems for lunar navigation. The Lunar Instrumentation for Subsurface Thermal Exploration with Rapidity (LISTER) measured heat flow from the Moon’s interior, providing insights into its thermal properties.

The Lunar Environment Heliospheric X-ray Imager (LEXI) captured images of Earth’s magnetosphere interacting with the solar wind, enhancing our understanding of space weather phenomena. Additionally, the mission serendipitously captured images of a total lunar eclipse from the Moon’s surface, offering a unique perspective on this celestial event.

NASA awarded Blue Ghost Mission 1 to Firefly Aerospace in February 2021 as part of the NASA CLPS program. The contract was valued at approximately $93.3 million, making Blue Ghost 1 a bargain providing far more scientific returns than it cost.

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It was a good day to have a good day here in Florida, and that’s exactly what NASA, SpaceX and Crew 10 had today at Kennedy Space Center.

Falcon 9 lifted off, carrying three astronauts and one cosmonaut toward orbit and the International Space Station just as the sun was starting to set in the west. Some seven and a half minutes later, SpaceX booster B1090 completed its duty for the day by landing at LZ-1 in Cape Canaveral, 8.8 miles south of LC-39A.

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Crew 10 launch
Falcon 9 rising off of LC-39A Friday evening
Photo: Derek Newsome

It was a good day to have a good day here in Florida, and that’s exactly what NASA, SpaceX and Crew 10 had today at Kennedy Space Center.

Falcon 9 lifted off, carrying three astronauts and one cosmonaut toward orbit and the International Space Station just as the sun was starting to set in the west. Some seven and a half minutes later, SpaceX booster B1090 completed its duty for the day by landing at LZ-1 in Cape Canaveral, 8.8 miles south of LC-39A.

Liftoff of Crew 10. Photo: Charles Boyer
Liftoff of Crew 10. Photo: Charles Boyer

Mechanical issues had delayed this launch, which was originally scheduled for Wednesday, March 12th, but hydraulic issues with ground-side equipment scotched that attempt, with the second launch attempt planned for today. This evening’s attempt was literally picture-perfect, and Falcon 9 rose like clockwork after a quiet countdown.

Press photographers capturing the launch of Crew 10.
Can’t help but cheer: press photographers capturing the launch of Crew 10.
Photo: Charles Boyer, Talk of Titusville

Crew Dragon Endurance is now in orbit, with NASA Astronauts Anne McClain,  Nichole Ayers, JAXA Astronaut Takuya Onishi and Roscosmos Cosmonaut Kirill Peskov aboard. The spacecraft will track down ISS, with docking planned to dock autonomously to the forward-facing port of the station’s Harmony module at approximately 11:30 p.m. ET tomorrow.

Launch Replay

Next Launch

While not officially announced by SpaceX, Starlink 12-16 is expected to launch early Saturday morning.

  • Organization: SpaceX
  • Location: Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
  • Rocket: Falcon 9
  • Pad: Space Launch Complex 40
  • Status: To Be Confirmed
  • Status Info: Awaiting official confirmation – current date is known with some certainty due to information found at secondary sources.
  • Window Opens: Saturday, 03/15/2025 6:28:00 AM
  • Window Closes: Saturday, 03/15/2025 10:59:00 AM
  • Destination: Low Earth Orbit
  • Mission Description: A batch of 23 satellites for the Starlink mega-constellation – SpaceX’s project for space-based Internet communication system.

Crew 10 Launch Gallery

Liftoff of Falcon 9 and Crew 10, March 14. 2025. Photo: Derek Newsome
Photo: Derek Newsome
Liftoff of Falcon 9 and Crew 10, March 14. 2025. Photo: Derek Newsome
Photo: Derek Newsome
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Crew Dragon on top of Falcon 9 at LC-39A, March 12, 2025
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

Some days you’re the bug, other days you’re the windshield.

The scheduled Wednesday launch of the Crew-10 mission to the International Space Station was scrubbed last night with a little more than forty six minutes left on the countdown clock. The delay stemmed from a malfunction in the hydraulic system of a ground support clamp arm attached to the Falcon 9 rocket, located at SpaceX’s Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Crew Safe And Still In Florida

The crew—comprising NASA astronauts Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers, JAXA astronaut Takuya Onishi, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Kirill Peskov—departed the Dragon spacecraft following the cancellation and will remain in Florida for the time being awaiting a new launch window.

NASA Astronauts Anne McClain (left) and Nichole Ayers (right) departing the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building (O&C) on their way to LC-39A and Falcon 9 on March 12, 2025
NASA Astronauts Anne McClain (left) and Nichole Ayers (right) departing the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building (O&C) on their way to LC-39A and Falcon 9 on March 12, 2025
Photo: Charles Boyer, Talk of Titusville

The earliest rescheduled launch window is now set for no sooner than Friday, March 14th at 7:06 PM ET in an instantaneous window. That date is dependant on remediations of the hydraulic issue at the launch pad. At this time, the Falcon 9 vehicle itself and the Crew Dragon the astronauts will fly aboard is in good condition.

Weather

Weatherwise, the U.S. Space Force 45th Weather Squadron has not released a new Launch Mission Execution forecast for tomorrow. General forecasts for the Cape are showing a minimal chance of rain with easterly winds between 5-10 MPH with gusts not being a great deal higher than that. Keep in mind that the general forecasts do not consider launch criteria and cover much larger area than the ascent corridor at and above LC-39A, so the 45th may have a different outlook on the probability of acceptable conditions.

Another consideration will be winds and seas along the ascent corridor. That must be within acceptable conditions. Reliable forecasts for winds at the altitudes Falcon 9 will be at are not available at this time. Bottom line: wait for the 45th Weather Squadron’s forecast to draw any conclusions about weather conditions for the launch.

Should the Crew-10 mission proceed on March 14, the preceding Crew-9 team—consisting of NASA astronauts Nick Hague, Suni Williams, and Butch Wilmore, alongside Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov—would undock from the space station NET Tuesday, March 18. That timeline remains contingent on suitable weather conditions at the designated splashdown zones off Florida’s coast and may change over the next few days.

Falcon 9 with Crew 10
Falcon 9 and Crew 10 at LC-39A on March 12, 2025
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville
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Intuitive Machines IM-2 post-landing
Intuitive Machines Nova-C class IM-2 lunar lander "Athena" on its side on the lunar surface. 
Photo: Intuitive Machines.
Intuitive Machines Nova-C class IM-2 lunar lander “Athena” on its side on the lunar surface.
Photo: Intuitive Machines.

Yesterday, Intuitive Machines Nova-C class IM-2 lunar lander “Athena” touched down on the lunar surface safely, but in a position feared to be suboptimal.

Yesterday, Intuitive’s CEO Steve Altemus said in his remarks at a Post-Landing press conference, “We don’t believe we’re in the correct attitude on the surface of the moon.” In other words, not fully upright. Intuitive added that they were working to gather additional data last night and that they would provide an update when the company’s engineers reached solid conclusions.

That update came this morning with Intuitive Machines saying:

Images downlinked from Athena on the lunar surface confirmed that Athena was on her side. After landing, mission controllers were able to accelerate several program and payload milestones, including NASA’s PRIME-1 suite, before the lander’s batteries depleted.

With the direction of the sun, the orientation of the solar panels, and extreme cold temperatures in the crater, Intuitive Machines does not expect Athena to recharge. The mission has concluded and teams are continuing to assess the data collected throughout the mission.

This southern pole region is lit by harsh sun angles and limited direct communication with the Earth. This area has been avoided due to its rugged terrain and Intuitive Machines believes the insights and achievements from IM-2 will open this region for further space exploration.

Intuitive Machines IM-2 Mission Updates, Retrieved March 7, 2025

At this time, it is unclear which, if any, of the instruments other than the PRIME-1 suite the lander carried were able to provide data before the mission’s conclusion. Prime-1, or the Polar Resources Ice Mining Experiment-1 (PRIME-1) was one of the primary activities planned the the IM-2 mission.

Other Experiments Aboard IM-2

Micro-Nova Hopper “Grace”: A drone equipped with a neutron spectrometer, Grace is designed to explore permanently shadowed regions (PSRs) within the nearby Marston crater. Its mission is to provide the first surface measurements of hydrogen in these PSRs, an essential indicator of water presence on the moon.

Lunar Outpost’s MAPP Rover: This commercial rover will autonomously map the lunar surface, capture stereo images, and collect thermal data. It is equipped to inspect samples of lunar regolith, contributing to the assessment of in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) potential.

Nokia’s Lunar Cellular Network: In collaboration with Nokia, the mission will deploy the first cellular network on the Moon, utilizing LTE technology to facilitate efficient data transmission between lunar assets and Earth.

Given that they were not mentioned in the Intuitive Machines update, it is reasonable to assume that those experiments could not be deployed.

This is the second attempt Intuitive has made to land on the moon with their Nova-C lander, with both attempts resulting in successful soft touchdowns but with the lander on its side and unable to complete its experiments fully.

IM-2 Improvements Over IM-1

Dr. Tim Crain
Dr. Tim Crain of Intuitive Machines in yesterday’s press conference after the IM-2 lunar landing. Photo: NASA livestream

In his remarks at yesterday’s joint press conference with NASA, Intuitive Machines’ Chief Growth Officer Dr. Tim Crain pointed out several major improvements to the company’s Nova-C spacecraft:

“They’ve always pointed the old offensive lineman about heavy lifting That’s kind of the way it works sometimes,” Tim Crain began. Crain is a former University of Texas Longhorn football player.

“I’d like to paint a little bit of a picture going back to Valentine’s day of last year when we launched Odysseus. Every day that we went in on that mission, it seemed like that vehicle was just trying to escape our grasp and we had to put out brush fires and understand how the systems we’d built were really working in space. And so every day was a challenge on that mission.”

“And then finally,” Dr. Crain continued, “We ended up on the surface and successfully communicating and operated for many, many days. After the mission, the team got together and we made a list of all the things we had. [We asked outselves] what do we need to change for the next mission? And we had 65 items. 10 were critical, the others were, well, if we can get these in for IM- 2, we will. But if not, they can wait on IM- 3 and it’s probably enough. We got all 65 of those in on this mission. “

“We took a couple of days off after the previous mission,” he said. “Then we got together, we do what we call a hot wash. And the first hot wash I did was on Project Morpheus when I was at NASA when we lost a And then we did a hot wash of all the things we wanted to And eight months later, we’re up and flying better than ever,” Crain said.

“So that was the experience kind of leading into spring of last year, April timeframe. These are all of the improvements that we wanna make. Our orbit determination needed improvement. We had people flying around the world to improve our ground sites to give us better measurements,” Dr. Crain continued.

“We partnered with NASA to have validation and cross- check data to make sure that our systems would work the way they’re supposed to. We had issues that we learned on the way we controlled our engines that we wanted to. Our thermodynamic venting system, could we make that better? Could we make it work the way we want it to work? We ran into problems on the first mission with helium management. Helium is very important to our system for pressurizing our cryogenic methane system, also for RCS.”

“And then we had measurements we wanted to make of craters that we weren’t able to get in place on the first mission. So we had a lot of new technology that we brought forward in this mission. And I’ll be honest, I had a little bit of trepidation when we launched about what some of these new things and improvements might do in the system. It was a night and day operational difference.”

“On day one, we gathered some data about our propulsion system. And then on day two, we fired the better than we’d ever fired it before. The comm systems on our Omni antennas, which aren’t even designed to bring high gain data home, worked better than our high gain antenna had worked on the first mission.”

“We get to the moon, our orbit determination was so precise that we were within a couple ofkilometers in our 100 kilometer orbit. And we didn’t even have to do a lunar correction maneuver that we had put in place, because we had to do one in an emergency on the first mission.”

IM-2 in lunar orbit
IM-2 in lunar orbit.
Courtesy Intuitive Machines

“So it really had moved from come in on the day of operations and save the vehicle to grab your lunch pail, go in, do spacecraft operations, as this magnificent machine called Athena moved her way to the all the way into lunar orbit. And then really the last couple of days in lunar orbit, we were expecting a fully successful landing. We did see some noise on our landing sensors towards the end, our crater recognition system. It’s machine learning on board.”

“How do you tell a computer to look for the craters but identify which craters those are on the moon. [It] worked almost an order of magnitude better than we’d anticipated. So we had every reason to believe that we were gonna come down and land with all systems the way we wanted to.”

“We’re trying to evaluate exactly what happened that very last bit. But I would tell you the improvement from the last mission to the next mission, really in less than a when you consider the fact that you have to be at the Cape early, you have to be done with testing before that.”

“And I’m incredibly proud of the team. I’m incredibly proud of how well this vehicle performed. And I will tell you, the future is bright for intuitive machines to land lots and lots of cargo on the moon.”

Conclusions

Dr. Crain and all of Intutive should be proud of his team and the job that they all did in preparing for and operating this mission. While it may seem on the surface that it was a failure, in fact, it was far from it. Many lessons were learned from IM-1, applied to IM-2 and major improvements were seen. It was also the second flight of a spacecraft fueled with cryogenic propellants, both by Intuitive and both successful. The landing, up to the very last, went well.

Now, Intuitive will assess what happened, devise and test improvements and will apply them to IM-3. The date for that mission is unknown at this time.

About NASA CLPS

Both of the Intuitive Machines missions were part of the NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program, which is aimed at accelerating lunar exploration by partnering with private companies to deliver science and technology payloads to the Moon. Through CLPS, NASA has awarded contracts to multiple U.S. commercial space firms to develop and operate robotic landers designed to study lunar geology, search for water ice, and test new technologies that could support future crewed missions under the Artemis program. This approach leverages the agility and cost-effectiveness of the commercial sector while advancing NASA’s long-term goals of establishing a sustainable human presence on the Moon.

the moon
A harsh mistress, the Moon.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

CLPS is inherently a high-risk endeavor, as NASA is relying on unproven commercial landers to execute complex lunar landings—an area historically dominated by government space agencies with decades of experience. Many of the selected providers are developing their landers for the first time, making each mission an experimental test with no guarantee of success.

Previous attempts by private entities and even national space agencies to land on the Moon have demonstrated how technically challenging it is, with several high-profile failures in recent years and one clear commercial success: Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost, which had a fully successful touchdown earlier this week.

While NASA accepts this risk as part of its strategy to foster innovation, the program’s success is far from certain, and early missions may encounter setbacks before commercial lunar deliveries become routine.

Intuitive Machines IM-2 lunar lander
Intuitive Machines IM-2 lunar lander in a publicity shot. Photo: Intuitive Machines
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Intuitive Machines IM-2 in lunar orbit
IM-2 during its descent.

Intuitive Machines’ confirmed the lunar lander IM-2 Athena, touched down on the Moon at approximately 11:30 a.m. CST on Thursday. That’s the good news.

The bad news, according to Intuitive’s Steve Altemus, “We don’t believe we’re in the correct attitude on the surface of the moon.” In other words, not upright.

Athena becomes the third commercial mission to safely touch down on the lunar surface, albeit with two less than optimal landings. “Any time humanity puts a lander on the moon, it’s a good day,” said Tim Crain, the Intuitive Machines Chief Growth Officer. Crain is right, but undoubtedly he is somewhat disappointed at less than a full success landing of IM-2 Athena.

The scene in Intuitive Machines’ Mission Control
Screen capture of NASA livestream

“[The] IMU data is a piece of data that says that we’re oriented somewhat on our side,” Crain explained later, immediately adding, “I want to get all the measurements to really be able to explain to you the configuration of the [vehicle.] I don’t have a good sense of that today.”

Several hours after the 15-foot-tall robotic lander reached the moon, uncertainty has loomed over its condition. It was unclear whether the spacecraft had executed a stable landing, allowing it to fully carry out its mission as planned, or if it had toppled or partially toppled upon touchdown—an outcome that could hinder its ability to fully deploy it scientific instruments.

Tim Crain of Intuitive Machines
Screen capture from NASA stream.
Tim Crain of Intuitive Machines
Screen capture from NASA stream.

At precisely 12:31 PM EST, Athena successfully touched down near the moon’s south pole. The descent and landing sequence unfolded as planned, with the spacecraft executing an 11-minute engine burn to slow its velocity for a controlled touchdown.

However, in the final moments before landing, flight controllers briefly lost communication with the lander—a disruption expected due to the dynamics of the descent. When contact was re-established, initial data confirmed that Athena had landed and was generating power through its solar panels, albeit not as much as was expected, and an indication that Athena was in less than an optimal state.

Tim Crain summed up his feelings by saying, “I’m incredibly proud of the team. I’m incredibly proud of how well this vehicle performed. And I will tell you, the future is bright for intuitive machines to land lots and lots of cargo on the moon.”

Intuitive has promised more information when it becomes available. This will an interesting mission to watch unfold.

Stay tuned.

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NASA Trailblazer
Rendering of NASA Trailblazer near the Moon.
Courtesy NASA
Rendering of NASA Trailblazer near the Moon.
Courtesy NASA

NASA’s Lunar Trailblazer is experiencing issues after its launch earlier this week. Trailblazer launched on February 26 aboard Falcon 9 from LC-39A at KSC.

The spacecraft successfully established initial communications with mission operators at Caltech’s IPAC in Pasadena, California, at 8:13 PM EST, but telemetry data soon revealed intermittent power problems with Lunar Trailblazer.

Fueled and attached to an adaptor used for secondary payloads, NASA’s Lunar Trailblazer is seen at SpaceX’s payload processing facility within NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida in early February 2025. The small satellite is riding along on Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 launch. Credit: SpaceX
Fueled and attached to an adaptor used for secondary payloads, NASA’s Lunar Trailblazer is seen at SpaceX’s payload processing facility within NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida in early February 2025. The small satellite is riding along on Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 launch.
 Credit: SpaceX

By early Thursday morning, around 4:30 AM EST, the team lost contact with the satellite. However, several hours later, Lunar Trailblazer’s transmitter powered back on, and engineers are now working with NASA ground stations to restore full communication. Efforts are focused on assessing the spacecraft’s power issues and identifying potential solutions.

Lunar Trailblazer was developed as part of NASA’s SIMPLEx (Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration) program, which funds low-cost, high-risk science missions. The initiative allows small spacecraft to hitch a ride alongside larger primary missions, enabling innovative research while accepting a higher level of operational risk.

NASA’S Trailblazer, launching aboard the SpaceX IM-2 mission on February 26, 2025
Photo: Chris Leymarie / Florida Media Now

Weighing a mere 440 pounds and measuring 11.5 feet wide with its solar panels fully deployed, Lunar Trailblazer is about the size of a dishwasher and relies on a relatively small propulsion system to travel cislunar space to lunar orbit. It is employing a low-energy transfer to save weight and to simplify the propulsion system aboard the spacecraft.

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SpaceX Falcon 9 IM-2 liftoff
SpaceX Falcon 9 IM-2 lifts off from LC-39A at 7:16 PM
SpaceX Falcon 9 IM-2 lifts off from LC-39A at 7:16 PM in the first of two evening launches.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

SpaceX launched twice from the Cape Wednesday night, as a Falcon 9 carrying Intuitive Machines second lunar lander lifted off at 7:16 PM from LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center, and three hours and eight minutes later, the company launched another Falcon 9 on the Starlink 12-13 mission.

Both launches were successful.

IM-2 Launch

The Nova-C lunar lander “Athena”, developed by Intuitive Machines, is embarking on its second mission. This mission includes NASA’s PRIME-1 (Polar Resources Ice Mining Experiment-1), marking the first demonstration of in-situ resource utilization on the Moon. PRIME-1 comprises two key instruments: the TRIDENT drill, designed to extract lunar ice, and the MSolo mass spectrometer, which will analyze the extracted material.

Intuitive Machines' IM-2 mission lunar lander, Athena, in the company's Lunar Production and Operations Center. Photo courtesy Intuitive Machines
Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission lunar lander, Athena, in the company’s Lunar Production and Operations Center. Photo courtesy Intuitive Machines

Additionally, several other spacecraft are on board:

  • Lunar Trailblazer, a small-class (D) lunar orbiter under NASA’s SIMPLEx program, is tasked with detecting and mapping water on the Moon’s surface. By analyzing the form, abundance, and distribution of lunar water in relation to geological features, it aims to enhance our understanding of the Moon’s water cycle.
  • Odin, a spacecraft developed by AstroForge, a company focused on asteroid mining, is set to venture into deep space. Its mission is to observe near-Earth asteroid 2022 OB5 from a distance of approximately one kilometer, providing critical data for AstroForge’s first asteroid retrieval mission. The flyby is expected to take place 11 months after launch.
  • CHIMERA GEO 1, a transfer spacecraft by Epic Aerospace, is designed to transport payloads into geostationary orbit. On this mission, it carries an unidentified 16U cubesat, manifested by Exolaunch, with the objective of securing an orbital position.

This mission represents a another step in lunar exploration and resource utilization, advancing scientific and commercial ambitions. The Artemis program will be a major beneficiary of IM-2, and if Astroforge is successful on the Odin mission, a new frontier for raw materials and resources may be kicked off. As for Chimera GEO 1, a successful mission will position Epic Aerospace as a viable vendor for satellite delivery to high orbits.

Liftoff of Space Falcon 9 and IM-2 on February 26, 2025.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

Starlink 12-13

Timelapse of Starlink 12-13.
Photo: Chris Leymarie, Florida Media Now

At 10:34 PM EST and 7.5 miles away on Space Launch Complex 40, SpaceX launched for the second time of the day when Falcon 9 launched another batch of 21 satellites for its Starlink mega-constellation.

With over 7,000 satellites in orbit and customers in over one hundred countries, Starlink has been growing rapidly as it provides broadband Internet access to early five million users.

Launch Replay

IM-2

Starlink 12-13

Next Launch

On Saturday, March 1st, SpaceX plans to launch Falcon 9 and Starlink 12-20 mission from SLC-40 down the Bimini Highway — southeastwards towards The Bahamas. This mission will be a near carbon copy of tonight’s Starlink launch.

  • Organization: SpaceX
  • Location: Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
  • Rocket: Falcon 9
  • Pad: Space Launch Complex 40
  • Window Opens: Saturday, 03/01/2025 8:57:00 PM EST
  • Window Closes: Sunday, 03/02/2025 1:28:00 AM EST
  • Destination: Low Earth Orbit
  • Mission Description: Another batch of satellites for the Starlink mega-constellation – SpaceX’s project for space-based Internet communication system.
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