News

The Firefly Aerospace Blue Ghost lander touched down on the moon. See footage of the descent and landing here. Credit: ...
NASA's Stereo Cameras for Lunar-Plume Surface Studies (SCALPSS) captured the landing of Firefly's Blue Ghost landing on the ...
Blue Ghost has landed, safely delivering 10 NASA scientific investigations and tech demos that will help us learn more about the lunar environment and support future astronauts on the Moon and ...
After orbiting the Earth for 25 days, Blue Ghost will fire up its thrusters and head to the moon, where it will orbit for 16 days before landing. Landing on the moon is no easy feat, as seen in ...
Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost lunar lander captured this shot of its own shadow on the moon just after its touchdown on March 2, 2025. (Image credit: Firefly Aerospace) — 'We're on the moon!' ...
The Blue Ghost spacecraft, from Texas-based Firefly Aerospace, zoomed to the moon, and in March it became the first robotic commercial vehicle to land upright on the lunar surface.
A laser navigating tool doomed a Japanese company’s lunar lander earlier this month, causing it to crash into the moon.
Unlike Blue Ghost, Resilience followed a "low energy transfer" path to reach the moon, which added months to the journey. It arrived in lunar orbit on May 6 and is finally ready for its landing ...
Blue Ghost took a faster trajectory and made its landing in March, becoming the first commercial spacecraft to land upright on the moon. This is Ispace’s second lunar landing attempt.
Blue Ghost touched down on the moon in March and completed its mission, but Resilience took a longer route to the moon. That longer, slower journey appears to have not paid off.
It shared a SpaceX ride with Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost, which reached the moon faster and became the first private entity to successfully land there in March.
Unlike Blue Ghost, Resilience followed a "low energy transfer" path to reach the moon, which added months to the journey. It arrived in lunar orbit on May 6 and is finally ready for its landing ...