'Giant leap in commercial exploration': Private US company lands on the Moon
The Moon's surface and Earth appear on the horizon, with Blue Ghost's solar panel, X-band antenna on the left, and the LEXI payload on the right. A US company successfully landed its spacecraft on the Moon, becoming only the second private mission to reach this milestone—and the first to touch down in an upright position. The mission has been nicknamed Ghost Riders in the Sky. (Image credit: AP)
This image, released by Firefly Aerospace on February 26, 2025, captures the Blue Ghost lunar lander in orbit around the Moon. It successfully landed at 3.34am US Eastern Time (0834 GMT) near Mons Latreille, a volcanic feature in Mare Crisium on the Moon's northeastern near side. (Image credit: AP)
As the landing occurred, the team erupted in cheers and applauds with an engineer at mission control in Austin, Texas, saying, "Y'all stuck the landing, we're on the Moon." (Image credit: AP)
Blue Ghost, designed to function for an entire lunar day (14 Earth days), is set to capture high-definition images of a total eclipse on March 14, when Earth obscures the Sun from the Moon's horizon. (Image credit: AP)
On March 16, Blue Ghost will capture a lunar sunset, providing insights into how dust lifts above the surface under solar influence—producing the enigmatic lunar horizon glow first observed by Apollo astronaut Eugene Cernan. (Image credit: Nasa)
Blue Ghost is equipped with 10 instruments, including a lunar soil analyzer, a radiation-resistant computer, and an experiment assessing the viability of using the global satellite navigation system for lunar navigation. (Image credit: AP)
The golden lander, roughly the size of a hippopotamus, lifted off on January 15 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. It shared the mission with a Japanese lander scheduled for a May landing attempt. (Image credit: Nasa)
"Firefly just became the first commercial company in history to achieve a fully successful Moon landing. This small step on the Moon represents a giant leap in commercial exploration," Firefly Aerospace said in a statement on X.
Nasa invested $101 million for Blue Ghost’s delivery, plus an additional $44 million for its onboard technology. The lander carries ten scientific instruments, including a vacuum to collect lunar soil samples, a drill capable of measuring temperatures 10 feet (3 metres) below the surface, and a device designed to counteract lunar dust, which caused issues during the Apollo missions.
The lander is expected to operate for two weeks before the harsh lunar night renders it inactive. However, Firefly has planned for Blue Ghost to continue functioning for several hours into the lunar night, extending data collection efforts.
During its journey, Blue Ghost sent back stunning images of both Earth and the Moon. It spent 45 days travelling through space, allowing mission controllers to conduct critical health checks on its subsystems and prepare the onboard instruments for lunar operations. While in orbit, it successfully acquired signals from the U.S. GPS and European Galileo constellations, demonstrating the potential for future lunar navigation.
On March 14, the lander is expected to capture high-definition images of a total lunar eclipse, when the Earth will completely block the Sun from the Moon’s horizon. Firefly also aims to document the lunar sunset on March 16, gathering data on how lunar dust levitates due to solar influences—a phenomenon first observed by Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Cernan.
The Moon is set for more visitors soon. Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission is due to land this week, targeting a site near the lunar south pole. Meanwhile, Japanese company ispace has a lander on a slower trajectory, expected to arrive in three months.
This mission is part of Nasa’s push to support commercial lunar exploration under its $2.6 billion Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) programme. It follows Intuitive Machines’ IM-1, the first private lunar landing in February 2024.
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