#ispace Resilience
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Lunar setback: Japanese lander loses contact during descent; fate of ‘Resilience’ mission uncertain - Times of India
This image provided by ispace, inc. shows the Resilience lander circling the moon (AP photo) A Japanese private lunar lander lost communication during its descent to the moon on Friday, leaving its fate unclear. Tokyo-based ispace confirmed that the lander, named Resilience, successfully departed lunar orbit, but contact was lost during the hour-long descent phase.The company’s livestream cut…
#ispace Resilience#Japanese lunar lander#lunar exploration#lunar rover#moon landing mission#NASA lunar project#private lunar lander#Resilience mission update
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Robotic Lunar Lander Launched From KSC Set To Land Today
A lunar lander that launched from KSC in January will attempt to land on the surface of the moon this afternoon. On January 15, 2025, at 1:11 a.m. EST, Japanese space company ispace launched its RESILIENCE lunar lander aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This mission, known as Hakuto-R Mission 2, marks ispace’s second attempt to achieve a soft landing on the…
#ispace#landing attempt#Lunar Lander#RESILIENCE landing attempt today#Titusville#what time is the RESILIENCE landing
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Astronomy Daily - The Podcast: S04E39 In this episode of Astronomy Daily, host Anna takes you on an exhilarating exploration of the latest happenings in the world of space exploration. From Blue Origin's ambitious new rocket plans to the thrilling journey of ispace's Resilience lunar lander, this episode is packed with captivating stories that will fuel your cosmic curiosity. Highlights: - Blue Origin's New Glenn Rocket Update: Discover the latest developments regarding Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket as the company prepares for its second launch. Learn about the challenges faced during the first flight and the significant restructuring within the company aimed at improving efficiency and focus. - Ispace's Resilience Lunar Lander: Follow the exciting progress of ispace's Resilience lander as it approaches a historic moon landing attempt. Understand the innovative fuel-saving trajectory it is taking and the scientific payloads it carries, including the Micro Rover. - James Webb Space Telescope's Role in Asteroid Tracking: Delve into how the James Webb Space Telescope is set to play a crucial role in assessing the potential impact risk of asteroid 2024 YR4, which has raised concerns among astronomers worldwide. - SpaceX's Starship Preparations: Get the latest on SpaceX's preparations for their eighth Starship test flight, including successful engine tests and modifications that are being made in anticipation of the upcoming launch. - Remarkable Spacecraft Resurrections: Be inspired by incredible stories of spacecraft that have defied the odds and returned from the brink of oblivion, showcasing the resilience of technology and the spirit of exploration. For more cosmic updates, visit our website at astronomydaily.io. Join our community on social media by searching for #AstroDailyPod on Facebook, X, YouTubeMusic, and TikTok. Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you for tuning in. This is Anna signing off. Until next time, keep looking up and stay curious about the wonders of our universe. 00:00 - Welcome back to Astronomy Daily 01:02 - Blue Origin's New Glenn updates 05:30 - Ispace's Resilience lunar lander progress 10:15 - James Webb Telescope and asteroid 2024 YR4 14:00 - SpaceX's Starship preparations 18:20 - Stories of spacecraft resurrections 25:00 - Conclusion and upcoming content ✍️ Episode References Blue Origin's New Glenn Rocket [Blue Origin](https://www.blueorigin.com) Ispace's Resilience Lunar Lander [Ispace](https://www.ispace-inc.com) James Webb Space Telescope Insights [James Webb](https://www.nasa.gov/webb) SpaceX's Starship Updates [SpaceX](https://www.spacex.com) Spacecraft Resurrections Stories [Spacecraft Resurrections](https://www.nasa.gov) Astronomy Daily [Astronomy Daily](http://www.astronomydaily.io)
#2024#asteroid#astrodailypod#blue#exploration#glenn#ispace#james#lander#lunar#new#origin#resilience#rocket#space#spacex#starship#telescope#webb#yr4
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SciTech Chronicles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jan 17, 2025
#Xeon#anesthetic#neuroprotectant#TBI#Alzheimer's#Mouse#Clinical-trials Firefly#iSpace#CLPS#Blue-Ghost#Resilience#Birth-rate#pets#obligations#competition#pressures#affordable#mortgage#Mayors#2008#homebuilders#qubit @quantum#antimony#Schrödinger#error-correction
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Monday SpaceTime 20250616 Series 28 Episode 72
A new window into the Moon’s hidden mantle
A new study of strange green glass beads brought back from the Moon appear to be evidence of a massive asteroid impact onto the lunar surface.




Unusual stellar nurseries discovered near our galaxy’s centre
A new study has found less stars are being formed near the galactic centre than in the rest of the Milky Way, despite the higher stellar density there.


Another lunar lander crashes onto the Moon
Japan’s iSpace lunar lander Resilience has crashed onto the surface of the Moon during its attempted landing.





The Science Report
Chinese scientists arrested in the US for allegedly smuggling biological pathogens into the country.
using mRNA technology to expose dormant human immunodeficiency virus hiding inside infected cells.
A new study may finally have solved the mystery of why cats purr.
Skeptics guide to the underground city beneath the pyramids
SpaceTime covers the latest news in astronomy & space sciences.
The show is available every Monday, Wednesday and Friday through your favourite podcast download provider or from www.spacetimewithstuartgary.com
SpaceTime is also broadcast through the National Science Foundation on Science Zone Radio and on both i-heart Radio and Tune-In Radio.
SpaceTime daily news blog: http://spacetimewithstuartgary.tumblr.com/
SpaceTime facebook: www.facebook.com/spacetimewithstuartgary
SpaceTime Instagram @spacetimewithstuartgary
SpaceTime twitter feed @stuartgary
SpaceTime YouTube: @SpaceTimewithStuartGary
SpaceTime -- A brief history
SpaceTime is Australia’s most popular and respected astronomy and space science news program – averaging over two million downloads every year. We’re also number five in the United States. The show reports on the latest stories and discoveries making news in astronomy, space flight, and science. SpaceTime features weekly interviews with leading Australian scientists about their research. The show began life in 1995 as ‘StarStuff’ on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s (ABC) NewsRadio network. Award winning investigative reporter Stuart Gary created the program during more than fifteen years as NewsRadio’s evening anchor and Science Editor. Gary’s always loved science. He was the dorky school kid who spent his weekends at the Australian Museum. Gary studied astronomy at university and was invited to undertake a PHD in astrophysics, but instead focused on a career in journalism and radio broadcasting. His radio career stretches back some 34 years including 26 at the ABC. Gary’s first gigs were spent as an announcer and music DJ in commercial radio, before becoming a journalist, and eventually joining ABC News and Current Affairs. He was part of the team that set up ABC NewsRadio and became one of its first on air presenters. When asked to put his science background to use, Gary was appointed Science Editor and quickly developed the StarStuff Astronomy show, which he wrote, produced, and hosted. The program proved extremely popular, consistently achieving 9 per cent of the national Australian radio audience -- based on the ABC’s Nielsen ratings survey figures for the five major Australian metro markets: Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth. That compares to the ABC’s overall radio listenership of 5.6 per cent. The StarStuff podcast was published on line by ABC Science -- achieving over 1.3 million downloads annually. However, after some 20 years, the show finally wrapped up in December 2015 following ABC funding cuts, and a redirection of available finances to increase sports and horse racing coverage. Rather than continue with the ABC, Gary resigned so that he could keep the show going independently. StarStuff was rebranded as “SpaceTime”, with the first episode broadcast in February 2016. Over the years, SpaceTime has grown, more than doubling its former ABC audience numbers and expanding to include new segments such as the Science Report -- which provides a wrap of general science news, weekly skeptical science features, special reports looking at the latest computer and technology news, and Skywatch – which provides a monthly guide to the night skies. The show is published three times a week (every Monday, Wednesday and Friday) and it’s available from the United States National Science Foundation on Science Zone Radio, and through both i-heart Radio and Tune-In Radio.
#science#space#astronomy#physics#news#nasa#astrophysics#esa#spacetimewithstuartgary#starstuff#spacetime#hubble#hubble telescope#hubble space telescope
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Tenacious (2025) by ispace, Japan. The Resilience lander is due to touchdown on the moon's "Sea of Cold" on Thursday June 5, 2025. Resilience is ispace's latest lunar lander using the same design as the failed Hakuto-R Mission 1. Weighing just 5kg, the Tenacious rover has a carbon fibre-reinforced plastic frame and includes a forward-mounted high-definition camera and a small shovel to collect samples for imaging by the camera. One noteworthy feature mounted on the chassis of the rover is an artwork by Mikael Genberg called the "Moonhouse"; a tiny model of an iconic Swedish red house.
"The Moon House will be the first site-specific artwork on the Moon created at the moment the House is installed on the Moon. The moon has always stimulated man's imagination with its cold beauty. The knowledge that there is a red house with white trim in the middle of the 'magnificent desolation', as one of the first lunar travelers put it, has the potential to change the whole picture. No matter what thoughts and feelings the lunar house generates in each of us, it leaves no one untouched." – Mikael Genberg.
UPDATE: "Resilience, ispace's second lunar lander, had problems measuring its distance to the surface and could not slow its descent fast enough, the company said, adding it has not been able to communicate with Resilience after a likely hard landing." – Reuters June 6, 2025.
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Ispace revela ‘culpado’ de missão lunar que fracassou pela 2ª vez
No início deste mês, contamos aqui sobre a segunda missão lunar fracassada da ispace. No dia 5 de junho, a empresa japonesa perdeu contato com a sonda Resilience durante uma tentativa de pouso na Lua. Na última quinta-feira (24), em um comunicado, o “culpado” por trás do problema foi finalmente revelado: uma ferramenta a laser. Entenda: No início de junho, a ispace enfrentou sua segunda missão…
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Private Japanese moon lander crashed due to laser errors, ispace says
An illustration of ispace’s Resilience moon lander alongside the Tenacious microrover it was attempting to carry to the lunar surface. (Image credit: ispace) A lander built by Japanese company ispace crashed on the lunar surface while attempting to make the nation’s first private moon landing earlier this month — and now we know why. Today (June 24), ispace released a statement detailing just…
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Japanese company blames laser tool for its 2nd crash landing on the moon
A laser navigating tool doomed a Japanese company’s lunar lander earlier this month, causing it to crash into the moon. Officials for ispace announced the news from Tokyo on Tuesday. The crash landing was the second for ispace in two years. This time, the company’s lander named Resilience was aiming for the moon’s far north in Mare Frigoris, or Sea of Cold. NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter…
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Japanese company blames laser tool for 2nd crash landing on the moon
A laser navigating tool doomed a Japanese company’s lunar lander earlier this month, causing it to crash into the moon. Officials for ispace announced the news from Tokyo on Tuesday. The crash landing was the second for ispace in two years. This time, the company’s lander named Resilience was aiming for the moon’s far north in Mare Frigoris, or Sea of Cold. NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter…

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Nasa spacecraft around the moon photographs the crash site of a Japanese company's lunar lander - The Times of India
This image provided by NASA shows an annotation indicating the impact site for ispace’s Resilience lunar lander, seen by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (Picture credit: AP) CAPE CANAVERAL: A Nasa spacecraft around the moon has photographed the crash site of a Japanese company’s lunar lander. Nasa released the pictures Friday, two weeks after ispace‘s lander slammed into the moon. The…
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#Cape Canaveral#ispace#Japanese lunar mission#lunar exploration#lunar lander#Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter#Mare Frigoris#moon crash site#NASA#Resilience lander
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Japan's Resilience moon lander has crashed into the lunar surface
The surface of the moon, as seen from orbit by Resilience before it crashed ispace SMBC x HAKUTO-R VENTURE MOON A Japanese space mission hoping to make history as the third ever private lunar landing has ended in failure, after ispace’s Resilience lander smashed into the moon at some point after 7.13pm UTC on 5 June. The lander had successfully descended to about 20 km above the moon’s surface,…
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NASA captures crash site of Japanese moon lander Resilience in detailed lunar photo |
NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has captured a high-resolution image revealing the crash site of Japan’s Resilience moon lander, developed by Tokyo-based private firm ispace. The lander was attempting a historic touchdown on June 5, 2025, in the Moon’s Mare Frigoris region, a vast ancient lava plain, but communication was lost shortly after its descent. The newly released image shows a…
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Have you heard? Okay, I need to help the user understand the key points from the provided AP News article about ispace's lunar lander mission. The user shared a URL but since I don't have direct access to it, I'll rely on the search results provided which contain detailed information about Mission 2. Looking at these search results, I see multiple sources covering the events. The main story is that ispace attempted its second Moon landing with the RESILIENCE lander on June
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Японский лунный модуль Resilience разбился: NASA показала снимки
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