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ispace Completes Success 5 of Mission 2 Milestones

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An image of the Moon taken on Feb. 15, 2025, by ispace’s RESILIENCE lunar lander at an altitude of 14,439 km. (Photo: Business Wire)
An image of the Moon taken on Feb. 15, 2025, by ispace’s RESILIENCE lunar lander at an altitude of 14,439 km. (Photo: Business Wire)

RESILIENCE Lunar Lander Completes Historic Lunar Flyby

TOKYO, February 15, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--ispace, inc. (ispace) (TOKYO: 9348), a global lunar exploration company, announced today that the RESILIENCE lunar lander successfully completed a flyby of the Moon on Feb. 15, 2025, reaching its closest point at 22:43 UTC, Feb. 14, 2025. The RESILIENCE lander came within approximately 8,400 kilometers of the Moon’s surface on its flyby, a historic first of its type for a Japanese private, commercial lunar lander.

RESILIENCE is now on a trajectory out to deep space before completing orbital maneuvers that will bring it back towards the Moon in advance of lunar orbit insertion. The date and time of the insertion maneuver have yet to be determined but are expected in early May.

Previously, RESILIENCE completed an orbital maneuver at 19:40:18 UTC, Jan. 16, 2025, at 250,000 kilometers from Earth, setting the lander on a course towards the Moon in order to complete the flyby and verifying operation of the main propulsion system, as well as the related guidance, control, and navigation system. The orbital maneuver required a main thruster burn lasting 16 seconds.

RESILIENCE was launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at 6:11:39 UTC, Jan. 15, 2025, and was successfully deployed from the rocket at 7:44:24 UTC. The RESILIENCE lander has completed the Earth orbit (① phase below) as well as the lunar flyby, known as Success 5. It has now entered a low energy transfer orbit (② phase below).

"I feel very confident about the RESILIENCE lander, which has steadily achieved milestones and is on track for success, and our employees who have made meticulous preparations for this impressive flyby of the Moon," said Takeshi Hakamada, Founder & CEO of ispace. "I look forward to watching the ongoing journey of RESILIENCE, navigating a low-energy orbit through deep space taking it at as far as 1.1 million kilometers from Earth before heading to the Moon."

Mission 2 Milestones

ispace has released a transparent set of criteria known as Mission 2 Milestones between launch and landing and aims to achieve the success criteria established for each of these milestones. The results from this mission as part of the HAKUTO-R lunar exploration program, will be weighed and evaluated against the criteria and lessons learned will be incorporated into future missions already in development.

 

 

Milestone

Milestone Success Criteria

Success 1

Complete

Completion of Launch Preparations

  • Complete all development processes of the RESILIENCE lunar lander before flight operations

  • Contract and prepare launch vehicle, and complete integration of lunar lander into the launch vehicle

  • Prove ability to flexibly manufacture and assemble landers in various geographic locations of the world

Success 2

Complete

Completion of Launch and Deployment

 

  • Complete successful separation of the lunar lander from the launch vehicle

  • Reaffirm that ispace’s lander design and structure is capable of withstanding the harsh conditions during launch on its second mission, offering valuable information towards future development and missions

Success 3

Complete

Establishment of Steady Operation State

  • Establish communication link between the lander and Mission Control Center, confirm a stable attitude as well as start stable generation of electrical power in orbit

Success 4

Complete

Completion of first Orbital Control Maneuver

  • Complete the first orbit control maneuver, setting the lander on a course towards the Moon

Success 5

Complete

Completion of Lunar Flyby

  • Complete a lunar flyby approximately one month after launch

  • Begin Deep Space Flight operations

Success 6

 

Completion of all Deep-Space Orbital Control Maneuvers before LOI

  • Complete all planned deep space orbit control maneuvers by utilizing gravity assist effects and successfully target the first lunar orbit insertion maneuver.

  • Reaffirm the deep-space survivability of ispace’s lander designs, as well as the viability of space’s lunar planning.

Success 7

 

Enter Lunar Orbit

  • Complete the first lunar orbit insertion maneuver and confirm that the lander is in a lunar orbit

  • Reaffirm the ability of ispace to deliver spacecraft and payloads into stable lunar orbits

Success 8

 

Completion of all Orbital Control Maneuvers in lunar orbit

  • Complete all planned lunar orbital control maneuvers before the landing sequence

  • Confirm the lander is ready to start the landing sequence

Success 9

 

Completion of Lunar Landing Sequence

  • Complete the landing sequence, verifying key landing abilities for future missions

Success 10

 

Establish Steady System after Landing

  • Establish a steady telecommunication and power supply on the lunar surface after landing

Payloads

On board the RESILIENCE lunar lander will be commercial customer payloads including: