International Lunar Observatory

The International Lunar Observatory (ILO) is a private scientific and commercial lunar mission by the International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA Hawai'i)[2] of Kamuela, Hawaii to place a permanent observatory near the South Pole of the Moon to conduct astrophysical studies using an optical telescope and possibly an antenna dish.[3] The mission aims to prove a conceptual design for a lunar observatory that would be reliable, low cost, and fast to implement. A precursor mission, ILO-X[4] consisting of two small imagers (totaling less than 0.6 kg), launched on 15 February 2024 aboard the Intuitive Machines IM-1 mission to the Moon south pole region.[1] It is hoped to be a technology precursor to a future observatories on the Moon, and other commercial initiatives.[5][6][7]

International Lunar Observatory (ILO)
NamesILO-1 (Flagship Mission to Lunar South Pole, launching 2025-26 TBD)ILO-2 (Backup Mission, TBD)
Mission typeTechnology, Astronomy
OperatorInternational Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA Hawai'i)
Websitehttps://iloa.org/the-ilo-mission/
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft typeTBD
ManufacturerLander: TBD
Telescope: Canadensys Aerospace
Start of mission
Launch date2025-26 (planned)[1]
RocketTBD
Launch siteTBD
ContractorTBD
Moon lander
Main telescope
NameILO-1
TypeTBD
 

The ILO-1 mission is being organized by the International Lunar Observatory Association[8] and the Space Age Publishing Company.[9] It was planned to be launched in 2008 with development by SpaceDev,[10] and was first delayed to 2013.[11] The prime contractors originally were Moon Express, providing the MX-1E lander,[12] and Canadensys Aerospace, providing the optical telescope system.[13][14] The estimated cost in 2004 was of US$50 million.[15]

Overview

The ILO-1 mission, was later scheduled to be launched in July 2020 with an Electron rocket from New Zealand.[16] The mission was called Moon Express Lunar Scout, and it would have used the MX-1E lander to deliver the observatory on top of the Malapert Mountain, a 5 km tall peak in the Aitken Basin region that has an uninterrupted direct line of sight to Earth, which facilitates communications any time.[12][17] The original launch of the MX-1E lander with an Electron rocket was cancelled sometime before February 2020; no launch date or launch rocket for the MX-1E has been since announced, leaving the status of it unknown.[18] The ILO-1 flagship payload, and its back up ILO-2, is still being advanced through work by Canadensys Aerospace Corporation (March 2024)[19] while ILOA seeks a different landing provider and partner to land on Malapert Mountain. ILO-1 or ILO-2 may fly with Intuitive Machines to the Moon South Pole region in late 2024 aboard IM-2, or fly with other international or national lunar missions currently under development.[20]

The small robotic ILO-1 observatory is designed to withstand the long lunar nights so it is expected to operate for a few years.[17] Moon Express would have also utilized the mission to explore the Moon's South Pole for mineral resources including water ice.[12][6] The original plan for the ILO-1 included an optical portion of the system is a Schmidt–Cassegrain telescope.[21] That optical system uses a 7 cm diameter lens, with an 18 cm focal plane, a 13 cm f/5.6 aperture,[6][22] and 6.4-megapixel resolution.[5] The telescope system would have been "about the size of a shoe-box" with a mass of approximately 2 kg.[5][6] As of 2024, the instruments for ILO-1 and ILO-2 are under consideration which main goals being astronomy from the Moon and imaging the Milky Way Galaxy Center.[23]

Some collaborators include the National Astronomical Observatory of China (NAOC), Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the newly formed Southeast Asia Principal Operating Partnership, and others.[24][25]

ILO-X precursor

An ILO-X Precursor instruments were launched on the Intuitive Machines Nova-C IM-1 mission on 15 February 2024.[26] IM-1 landed on the Moon on 22 February, about halfway through the lunar day. Since the lander is unprotected from the cold lunar night, it was only expected to operate until sunset, about seven earth days. ILO-X includes both wide-field and narrow-field imaging systems.[27] The narrow field-of-view imager was named "Ka 'Imi" (To Search) after a student won the Moon Camera Naming Contest held statewide in Hawai'i from March-May 2022.[28] There was an auction[29] to name the wide field-of-view instrument which closed 22 March 2024 and resulted in the winning name Lunar Codex being proposed and accepted.[30] ILOA released its first images from the ILO-X wide field-of-view imager to the public on 29 February 2024 which included one image taken during Deorbit, Descent and Landing (DDL) on 22 February 2024 about 4.2 minutes prior to touchdown which occurred 23:24 UTC, and another image post-landing taken at about 00:30 UTC on 25 February 2024 which shows portions of the lunar landscape, regolith / dust, the Sun, and the IM-1 Odysseus lunar lander.[31] The company received a total of 9 high-resolution and 105 thumbnail images from the ILO-X imagers,[32] but the mission did not fulfill its main astronomy mission goals to capture images of the Milky Way Galaxy or stars in the celestial sky due to off-nominal pointing of the lander.[33]

Objective

The mission's objective is to conduct astrophysical observations from the surface of the Moon, whose lack of atmosphere eliminates much of the need for costly adaptive optics technology.[34] Also, since the Moon's days (about fourteen Earth days) have a dark sky, it allows for nonstop astronomical observations.[34] Disadvantages include micrometeorite impacts, cosmic and solar radiation, lunar dust, and temperature shifts as large as 350 °C.[34] The mission aims to acquire images of galaxies, stars, planets, the Moon and Earth. The project will promote commercial access to the telescope use to schools, scientists and the public at large through the Internet.[5]

See also

References

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