Space photos from 5 recent moon-landing missions show how tiny engineering errors can cause big problems, like crashing or landing sideways

Moon landings are so complex that even the tiniest mistakes have caused missions to crash or burn. These photos from space explain why.

Space photos from 5 recent moon-landing missions show how tiny engineering errors can cause big problems, like crashing or landing sideways
gold moon lander upside down on grey lunar surface beside image of a new crater on the moon with white disturbed regolith around it
While Japan's moon-landing error caused its robot to land upside-down (left), Israeli nonprofit SpaceIL's error caused its lander to crash (right).
  • Intuitive Machines' uncrewed Odysseus moon landing almost failed due to a single safety switch.
  • Other moon-landing attempts have crashed or burned due to leaky valves or software glitches.
  • Their photos show how even the tiniest details make a huge difference in spaceflight.

Landing on the moon is so difficult that, until last year, only three nations had ever done it without crashing. Recently, India, Japan, and one private company — Intuitive Machines — have joined their ranks.

Intuitive Machines' moon landing on Thursday was particularly significant, returning the US to the lunar surface for the first time in nearly 52 years and softly landing the first commercial spacecraft on the moon.

But the mission narrowly avoided the same fate as several lunar-landing attempts before it: death by small engineering error.

The Houston-based company's uncrewed Odysseus lander was almost lost to one of the tiniest possible mistakes. A safety switch that should have been switched off before launch was left on instead, effectively disabling the navigation system that was supposed to guide the robot to a safe landing spot.

fisheye view of lunar surface with moon lander legs in the foreground
The view from the Intuitive Machines Odysseus lander as it descended to its landing site.

With less than two hours to go before landing, Intuitive Machines engineers frantically whipped up a new navigation system. They reprogrammed the spacecraft to instead use the laser technology from a NASA experiment it was carrying to the moon. The experiment wasn't meant to land the spacecraft, but it worked in a pinch.

At the last second, though, the lander tipped over and settled on its side. That seems to be unrelated to the errant safety switch.

moon lander model small figurine laying sideways on a table propped on a small blue mini of itself with a torso in a suit in the background seated at the table with hands folded next to a microphone
Intuitive Machines CEO Steve Altemus shows the world how the Odysseus lander is sitting on the moon: sideways, probably leaning on a rock or slope.

"Spaceflight is hard. A million things have to go right, and if one thing goes wrong, you can still have a failure," Trent Martin, vice president of space systems at Intuitive Machines, said in a NASA press briefing in January, weeks before Odysseus launched.

Indeed, several robotic moon landing attempts have crashed or otherwise malfunctioned in the last few years. Overall, only about 50% of lunar landing missions succeed.

In each recent case, failure comes down to tiny engineering details — of a million steps, just one going wrong. Photos from those missions show just how important the little things are in spaceflight.

Astrobotic's lander may have succumbed to one leaky valve

Sometimes all it takes to kill a moon landing is one small piece of subpar hardware.

Just a month before Intuitive Machines triumphed, Astrobotic — another US company working with NASA to reach the moon — failed.

Just hours after launch, Astrobotic's Peregrine lander began leaking fuel. When it beamed its first photo back to Earth, it showed the lander's insulation crumpling.

Photo of dented Multi-Layer Insulation on board the Peregrine mission.
Peregrine's Multi-Layer Insulation appears dented during its mission to the moon.

Astrobotic said the most likely cause was a valve failing to reseal in the fuel-tank system. That small failure was enough to drain the lander's fuel, cause the crumpling in the photo, and ultimately doom the mission.

Landing on the moon had become impossible, Astrobotic decided, so Peregrine burned up in Earth's atmosphere instead.

3 moon crashes show how time is compressed in the final '15 minutes of terror'

Especially in the final stages of descent, there is almost no room for error in a moon landing.

That's what India learned from its first attempt to land on the moon, in 2019. The Vikram lander crashed into the moon because it slowed down more quickly than its braking system had been programmed to accommodate, SpaceNews later reported.

NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) later discovered Vikram's remains scattered across the lunar surface.

lunar surface area with blue and green dots indicating vikram lander crash debris spread long over several kilometers
The Vikram lander's crash site, as seen by LRO. Green dots indicate spacecraft debris and blue dots indicate lunar soil disturbed by the crash.

In those final stages, a spacecraft is completely on its own. There is no time for mission operators to respond to fresh data from the spacecraft, write new commands, and beam them back to the moon.

"Time gets greatly compressed," Robert Braun, the space exploration lead at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, previously told Business Insider. "There's very little margin to try something again if it didn't happen as planned."

That's why Kailasavadivoo Sivan, who was India's space program director at the time, has called this final phase "15 minutes of terror."

Last year Japanese company ispace also lost its moon lander in those final stages, just a few miles above the lunar surface, due to a software glitch. LRO spotted that lander in pieces, too:

gif flashing between before and after images of the lunar surface show the appearance of four spots of debris from a lunar lander crash
Before-and-after images from LRO show pieces of ispace's lunar lander scattered on the moon's surface.

"Once you initiate a landing sequence, you're committed. It's kind of like jumping out of a plane," Braun said. "Your parachute has to work."

The Beresheet lander, by Israeli nonprofit SpaceIL, also went into freefall during the critical final stages of its landing in 2019. One computer command led to a cascade of technical glitches that made its main engine fail. LRO spotted its wreckage, too:

israel beresheet private moon lander crash site nasa lunar reconnaissance orbiter lro labeled
An enhanced picture shows the crash site of Beresheet, a 1,300-lb lunar lander created by the Israeli nonprofit SpaceIL.

Japan's upside-down moon landing survived a major failure

Japan's Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) recently survived a big malfunction — with a twist.

One of the lander's two main thrusters failed as it was descending, causing the spacecraft to tumble. It survived the chaotic fall, and managed to deploy the two tiny rovers it carried.

But a photo from one of those rovers later revealed the lander had landed upside-down.

image taken by a Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2 (LEV-2) of a robotic moon rover called Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, on the moon.
Image taken by a Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2 (LEV-2) of Japan's SLIM lander upside down on the moon.

That angled its solar panels away from the sun, which has taken a toll on the spacecraft's energy generation and left it with too little battery power to operate for much of its mission.

SLIM's case shows that sometimes extremely robust hardware and software engineering, plus a healthy dose of luck, can help a lander do its job despite an error or two.

Similarly, Intuitive Machines' success on Thursday shows that small errors don't necessarily have to spell the end of a mission.

"Space is hard, and equipment doesn't always operate as expected," Braun told Business Insider after Odysseus landed. "In this case here, engineers on the ground came up with an ingenious way to keep the mission on track and actually accomplish the landing."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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