The moon: South Korea arrives

Danuri, also known as the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO), launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in early August last year and arrived in lunar orbit four months later, in mid-December. The milestone adds South Korea to the exclusive club of nations with successful moon missions, which also includes Japan, China and India, among others.

The Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) has now released images from the $180 million Danuri showing the crater and textured lunar surface in the foreground with the distant Earth behind.

Knee garrs maybe mutafika huko in 800 years by that time mzunye atakuwa Andromeda

Private Japanese lunar lander performs 2nd major maneuver on its way to the moon
By Tereza Pultarova published 2 days ago
Tokyo-based startup ispace’s HAKUTO-R lander remains on course to reach the moon in April.

The HAKUTO-R lunar lander by Japanese startup ispace is on its way to Earth’s natural satellite after successfully completing its second major deep-space maneuver.

HAKUTO-R, which launched atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on Dec. 11, 2022, has already traveled over 770,000 miles (1,24 million kilometers) from Earth, according to a company statement(opens in new tab).

The spacecraft, which could be the first private mission to successfully soft-land on the moon, has completed two “orbital control maneuvers” to date and also sent some awe-inspiring images back to Earth.

The second maneuver took place on Monday (Jan. 2) shortly after midnight Japanese time (10 p.m on Jan. 1 EST) and lasted longer than the first orbital correction maneuver, which was performed on Dec. 15.

The mission, which will reach its farthest distance from Earth (860,000 miles, or 1.4 million km) on Jan. 20, will then perform a third thruster firing to help fine-tune its trajectory in order to enter orbit around the moon.

“Since its launch on Dec. 11, 2022, the lander has maintained stable navigation in accordance with the mission plan,” ispace said in the statement. “Once the lander has navigated deep space for one month, it will have achieved Mission 1 Milestone Success 5, at which point an announcement is expected to be made.”

HAKUTO-R is scheduled to land on the moon this coming April, after which it will deploy a small rover called Rashid for the United Arab Emirates. That would be a huge milestone, the first-ever successful soft lunar touchdown by a private lander. (In 2019, the Beresheet lunar lander by SpaceIL of Israel crashed during its landing attempt.)

There should be others in short order afterward, however; several other private moon landers are readying for launch in the coming months, including Nova-C by Intuitive Machines and Astrobotic’s Peregrine.

Buccaneers and other private entities are headed to the moon. What is there?

Mbisha iko wapi?

@PHARMACY can rotate his kinyambis more than the Russian sputnik missile

Hii Korea ndio Kenya at independence( tukipigwa lecture ya how corruption fuckedd Kenya) tulikuwa tunawapea SGR loans wakiwa na Singapore ? @Sambamba

What has that to do with space talk in this thread?grow up stupid biach.
Meanwhile kenya is launching lethal GMO food as the brilliant resort to end hunger and the way kenya has highly productive lands owned by fools[ATTACH=full]489627[/ATTACH]

You follow each other and drag @Sambamba too:D:D:D:D:D

Diamonds