It is transmitting, but normal communications have still not been reestablished. First US built spacecraft on the moon in 50+ years. Last one was Apollo 17 in 1972.
Talk about something that would have freaked me out. An hour ago I was in the back yard working on my grandson's telescope. He asked me if I could tighten some of the brackets because he couldn't get it to hold steady. If I had been messing with it and saw something landing on the moon I would have freaked out.
Flight control has confirmed the lander is upright and is now sending data. Pictures soon. Odie is very near the moon's south pole.
That was incredibly fortuitous. NASA included that navigation package to demonstrate the technology on the flight to the moon and it wound up landing the craft and saving the mission. Still concerned no photos have been released.
following an estimated trillion(s) $ invested to achieve industrial scale mining, and assuming we have functional scaled He3 reactors to create the demand. Maybe my children will witness a future reality. Guess we need to stake our claim on a share of the pie.
Similar to how peeps from 100 years ago would be shocked at our current tech, we would be equally shocked at what they may have by 2124.
Good news.: "Immediately after Odysseus' estimated landing time had passed, the primary worry was that it wasn't sending back a clear signal. And even when a signal was attained at last, it was a faint one. But on Feb. 23, a day after the landing success, Intuitive Machines announced in an X post that "Odysseus is alive and well. Flight controllers are communicating and commanding the vehicle to download science data. The lander has good telemetry and solar charging." Intuitive Machines' Odysseus lander is alive and well on the moon
The moon lander dubbed Odysseus is "alive and well" but resting on its side a day after a white-knuckle touchdown as the first private spacecraft ever to reach the lunar surface, and the first from the United States since 1972, the company behind the vehicle said on Friday. The chief executive officer of Houston-based Intuitive Machines, which built and flew the lander, said the vehicle is believed to have caught one of its six landing feet on the lunar surface during its final descent and tipped over, coming to rest propped up sideways on a rock. https://www.reuters.com/technology/...ter-white-knuckle-lunar-touchdown-2024-02-23/
https://www.reuters.com/technology/...ter-white-knuckle-lunar-touchdown-2024-02-23/ states lander is horizontal but functional.