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ispace Completes Success 4 of Mission 2 Milestones

17 Jan, 2025

RESILIENCE Lunar Lander Completes First Orbital Maneuver

TOKYO –January 17, 2025 – ispace, inc. (ispace) )(TOKYO: 9348), a global lunar exploration company, announced today that the RESILIENCE lunar lander successfully completed its first orbital maneuver at 19:40:18 UTC, Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025, at 250,000 kilometers from Earth, setting the lander on a course towards the Moon 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 that lasted 16 seconds. By verifying the systems and completing the maneuver, the RESILIENCE lander has completed Success 4 of the Mission 2 Milestones

RESILIENCE was launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at 6:11:39 UTC, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025, and was successfully deployed from the rocket at 7:44:24 UTC. The RESILIENCE lander is currently in Earth orbit (① phase below) and will complete a lunar flyby, known as Success 5, and then enter a low energy transfer orbit (② phase below).

“The RESILIENCE lander is performing as we expect it and now following this thrust by the propulsion system is now heading towards a lunar flyby,” said Takeshi Hakamada, Founder & CEO of ispace. “We are very pleased with the performance of the lander, the subsystems and of our very dedicated Mission Operations specialists and staff who are busy operating the lander. I want to thank them, all of our employees and stakeholders who are cheering us on during the first steps of this mission.”

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.

Payloads

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

  • Water electrolyzer equipment: From Takasago Thermal Engineering Co.
  • Food production experiment: A self-contained module from Euglena Co.
  • Deep space radiation probe: Developed by the Department of Space Science and Engineering, National Central University, Taiwan
  • Commemorative alloy plate: Developed by Bandai Namco Research Institute, Inc. and modeled after “Charter of the Universal Century” from the animation Mobile Suit Gundam UC
  • TENACIOUS micro rover: Developed by ispace-EUROPE, this rover will explore the landing site, collect lunar regolith, and relay data back to the lander. It will be equipped with a forward-mounted HD camera and a shovel.
  • Moonhouse: A model house by Swedish artist Mikael Genberg that will be mounted on the rover.

The RESILIENCE lander will serve as a cultural artifact, carrying a UNESCO memory disk that preserves linguistic and cultural diversity.

ispace is leveraging its global presence through its three business units in Japan, the U.S., and Luxembourg, for the simultaneous development of upcoming missions. Mission 2, featuring the RESILIENCE lunar lander, is led by ispace Japan and was launched on Jan. 15, 2025. In this mission, TENACIOUS micro rover developed by ispace Europe SA to be deployed on the lunar surface to conduct technological demonstration of regolith extraction as well as mobility on the lunar surface Mission 3, debuting the APEX 1.0 lunar lander, is led by ispace-U.S. and is expected to launch in 2026.  Mission 6, which will utilize the Series 3 lander, currently being designed in Japan, is scheduled to be launched by 2027.

About ispace, inc. (https://ispace-inc.com)

ispace, a global lunar resource development company with the vision, “Expand our planet. Expand our future.”, specializes in designing and building lunar landers and rovers. ispace aims to extend the sphere of human life into space and create a sustainable world by providing high-frequency, low-cost transportation services to the Moon. The company has business entities in Japan, Luxembourg, and the United States with more than 300 employees worldwide. For more information, visit: www.ispace-inc.com and follow us on X: @ispace_inc.

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