Firefly’s Blue Ghost ends its mission, having achieved all its mission goals

Blue Ghost’s shadow on the Moon shortly
after landing, with the Earth in the background.
Five hours after lunar sunset Firefly yesterday shut down its Blue Ghost lander, ending its mission after successfully completing all its assigned tasks in carrying ten NASA research payloads to the Moon and softly placing them on the lunar surface.
Firefly also captured imagery of the lunar sunset on March 16, providing NASA with data on whether lunar dust levitates due to solar influences and creates a lunar horizon glow that was hypothesized and observed by Eugene Cernan on Apollo 17. Following the sunset, Blue Ghost operated for 5 hours into the lunar night and continued to capture imagery that measures how dust behavior changes after sunset.
“Whether lunar dust levitates” is one of the biggest scientific mysteries about the Moon. Only one person, astronaut Harrison Schmidt, has observed the phenomenon during the last Apollo mission to the Moon, and numerous attempts since to confirm and better understand it have all failed for one reason or the other. The preliminary results of Blue Ghost observations will be announced at a press conference tomorrow.
Firefly is now gearing up for annual Blue Ghost lunar missions. The next is targeting a launch next year, and will also deliver payloads for NASA, the European Space Agency, and Australia.
Blue Ghost’s shadow on the Moon shortly
after landing, with the Earth in the background.
Five hours after lunar sunset Firefly yesterday shut down its Blue Ghost lander, ending its mission after successfully completing all its assigned tasks in carrying ten NASA research payloads to the Moon and softly placing them on the lunar surface.
Firefly also captured imagery of the lunar sunset on March 16, providing NASA with data on whether lunar dust levitates due to solar influences and creates a lunar horizon glow that was hypothesized and observed by Eugene Cernan on Apollo 17. Following the sunset, Blue Ghost operated for 5 hours into the lunar night and continued to capture imagery that measures how dust behavior changes after sunset.
“Whether lunar dust levitates” is one of the biggest scientific mysteries about the Moon. Only one person, astronaut Harrison Schmidt, has observed the phenomenon during the last Apollo mission to the Moon, and numerous attempts since to confirm and better understand it have all failed for one reason or the other. The preliminary results of Blue Ghost observations will be announced at a press conference tomorrow.
Firefly is now gearing up for annual Blue Ghost lunar missions. The next is targeting a launch next year, and will also deliver payloads for NASA, the European Space Agency, and Australia.