This handout image released by Astrobotic on January 18, 2024 shows an image from Astrobotic's Peregrine Lunar Lander in space showing Earth in its sights. A crippled American spaceship is set to burn up in the atmosphere over a remote region of the South Pacific on January 18, 2024, bringing a fiery end to its failed mission to land on the Moon.  Photo by ASTROBOTIC / AFP
TECHTALKS

U.S. lunar ship lost over South Pacific

Agence France-Presse

A crippled American spaceship has been lost over a remote region of the South Pacific, probably burning up in the atmosphere in a fiery end to its failed mission to land on the Moon.

Astrobotic’s Peregrine lander was launched on January 8 under an experimental new partnership between NASA and private industry intended to reduce costs for American taxpayers and seed a lunar economy.

But it experienced an explosion shortly after separating from its rocket and had been leaking fuel, damaging its outer shell as well as making it impossible to reach its destination.

In its latest update, Astrobotic posted on X that it had lost contact with its spacecraft shortly before 2100 GMT Thursday, mid-morning on Friday in the local time zone, indicating a “controlled re-entry over open water” as it had predicted.

The Pittsburgh-based company added it would await independent confirmation of Peregrine’s fate from the relevant government authorities. A previous update provided atmospheric re-entry coordinates a few hundred miles (kilometers) south of Fiji, albeit with a wide margin of error.

Engineers had executed a series of small engine burns to position the boxy, golf cart-sized robot over the ocean to “minimize the risk of debris reaching land.”