Israeli spacecraft Beresheet crashes in attempt to land on moon

Spacecraft’s engine turned off shortly before landing and it was in pieces scattered at the landing site.

An image taken by Israel spacecraft, Beresheet, upon its landing on the moon [Space IL/Handout via Reuters]

An Israeli spacecraft has crashed into the moon moments before touchdown, failing in an ambitious attempt to make history as the first privately funded lunar landing.

Around 20 minutes before the scheduled landing on Thursday, engine firings slowed the Beresheet’s descent. Engineers watched in silence as the craft, its movements streamed live on dozens of screens, glided towards a free fall.

The spacecraft lost communication with ground control during its final descent. Moments later, the mission was declared a failure.

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“We definitely crashed on the surface of the moon,” said Opher Doron of Israel Aerospace Industries.

He said the spacecraft’s engine turned off shortly before landing, and scientists were still trying to figure out the cause. The spacecraft was in pieces scattered at the landing site, he said.

Beresheet, whose name is Hebrew for the biblical phrase ‘In the beginning’, had travelled through space for seven weeks in a series of expanding orbits around Earth before crossing into the moon’s gravity last week. 

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The control room in Yahud on April 11 before the crash [Space IL/Handout via Reuters]

Doron nonetheless called the mission an “amazing success” for reaching the moon and coming so close to landing successfully.

The mishap occurred in front of a packed audience that included Israel‘s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and was broadcast live on national television.

“We will try again,” said Netanyahu. “We reached the moon, but we want to land more comfortably, and that is for the next time.”

The failure was a disappointing ending to a 6.5 million kilometre lunar voyage, almost unprecedented in length, that was designed to conserve fuel and reduce costs. The spacecraft hitched a ride on a SpaceX rocket launched from Florida in February.

“What makes it hard is the conditions. The geological and atmospheric conditions are different on the moon and the planets than they are on Earth,” said American University professor Howard McCurdy, who has written several books about space.

“It makes it really hard to test” the spacecraft’s landing back on Earth, he added.

Source: News Agencies

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