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Ispace's Resilience Lander Crashes in Second Moon Landing Attempt

  • Japanese company ispace's second lunar mission, Resilience, attempted a landing on the moon's Mare Frigoris region on June 5, 2025, but lost communication during descent.
  • The mission followed a low-energy trajectory launched on January 15, but likely crashed after failing to slow from 187 kilometers per hour during the final descent.
  • Resilience carried a 340-kilogram lander with multiple payloads, including a six-wheeled rover named Tenacious and an art piece called Moonhouse by Mikael Genberg.
  • Ispace CEO Takeshi Hakamada emphasized that since a successful lunar landing seems unlikely at this time, their immediate focus is on quickly examining the telemetry data to determine what went wrong.
  • The company concluded the mission ended in a hard landing, adding that it will investigate the cause thoroughly while planning future missions supported by an $80 million Japanese government award.
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The Register broke the news in on Thursday, June 5, 2025.
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