Blue Ghost moon lander lowers its orbit to fly closer to the lunar surface (video)

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There’s a lot less sky and a lot more moon in view for Firefly Aerospace’s “Ghost Riders in the Sky” mission.

Firefly’s lunar lander, named Blue Ghost, entered orbit around the moon last week, ending a four-day transit from Earth and starting to gear up for a lunar touchdown. In the lead-up to that landing attempt, which should take place a little less than two weeks from now, Blue Ghost recently completed a three-minute, 18-second engine burn to lower its orbit around the moon. The maneuver brought the lander to an altitude of 75 miles (120 kilometers) above the lunar surface, where it will remain until beginning its descent.

In a post on X, which included a video of the probe’s new close-up view of the lunar surface, Firefly suggested intermittent communications blackouts with Blue Ghost would occur as the lander circles around the far side of the moon. While the lander is still on the near side, Firefly’s team is continuing to receive data and finalize the probe’s next engine burns and landing patterns. “That will get Blue Ghost even closer to the lunar surface and keep us right on track for landing on March 2,” the post says.

(Image credit: Firefly Aerospace)

Blue Ghost launched last month on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Ghost Riders in the Sky is one of the space agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) missions, which contracts private companies to fly NASA science experiments and equipment to the moon. Blue Ghost is carrying 10 research and technology demonstrations built to study the lunar environment as NASA ramps up its efforts to return astronauts to the moon through the Artemis program.





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