Astrobotic aims for first commercial Moon landing with launch Monday carrying NASA science

The Peregrine Moon lander inside ULA's Vulcan rocket fairings. (Image: NASA/ULA) (NASA)

NASA is heading back to the Moon as soon as this Monday, but this time, the agency is flying commercial with Astrobotic, a Pittsburgh-based company aiming to become the first private business to land on the Moon.

Five NASA-sponsored lunar science payloads are set to launch at 2:18 a.m. ET on the Astrobotic Peregrine Moon lander from Cape Canaveral, Florida. 

There are a lot of firsts for this lunar mission, beginning with the launch itself. The robotic mission is launching on United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket as the first mission for the new rocket. While much of the rocket hardware is based on ULA's workhorse rocket, the Atlas V, it has new engines developed by Blue Origin

With a new rocket, it's possible the launch could be delayed again. The liftoff was initially scheduled for early last year and has been delayed multiple times to allow for more testing.

A few days ahead of the scheduled launch, the forecast is 85% favorable with the primary concern being thick cloud cover around the launch site. 

2024 ROCKET LAUNCH SCHEDULE SHOWS CONTINUED STEADY PACE OF BLAST-OFFS

Orbiter-lunar.jpg

This is an image of the Gruithuisen Domes, taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. Image Credit: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University. (NASA)

In another first for the U.S. space agency, this isn't a NASA-controlled lander going to the Moon; it's a commercially built and operated robotic mission benefiting from NASA-funded technological developments and contracts.

Astrobotic was among the 14 private companies selected by NASA under the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program to deliver science to the Moon ahead of the first Artemis astronaut missions to the lunar south pole in late 2025. In February, another NASA CLPS contractor, Houston-based company Intuitive Machines, will launch its Nova-C lander with SpaceX.

The Peregrine lander carries 20 payloads to the lunar surface, including five NASA science missions that will study lunar volatiles, radiation and navigation on the Moon.

Navajo Nation asks NASA, DOT to delay Moon launch

Because this is not a NASA spacecraft, there are also dozens of other small items launching to the Moon, including cremated human remains for Celestis and Elysium Space

Arizona Public Radio first reported on Dec. 28 that Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren has asked NASA and the U.S. Department of Transportation to delay the launch because the Moon is part of the Navajo's spiritual heritage, and depositing human remains is "tantamount to desecration of this sacred space." 

NASA Deputy Associate Administration for Exploration Joel Kearns said NASA received the letter from the Navajo Nation, and an intergovernmental team is looking into Nygren's request. 

NASA LAUNCHES GIANT BALLOON FROM ANTARCTICA TO MAP OUT MILKY WAY

"We take concerns as expressed from the Navajo Nation very, very seriously," Kearns said. "And we think we're going to be continuing on this conversation."

When asked on a call with reporters if NASA knows all the payloads heading with its science to the Moon, NASA CLPS Program Manager Chris Culbert said the agency has "reasonably good awareness about what payloads are on these commercial missions."

"We don't have the framework for telling them what they can and can't fly," Culbert said.

NASA buys down risk with more commercial launches

NASA is betting on some of the CLPS missions to be successful but knows there will be failures. Only four countries have successfully landed on the Moon, including the U.S., and no private company has yet to do so. 

Just over half of all lunar landings have been successful.

"Each landing attempt is like taking shots on goal; the more shots, the more opportunities you get the score," Culbert said, quoting Thomas Zurbuchen, the former head of NASA's Science Mission Directorate. "Today, we don't know how many of these early tests will be successful, but I can tell you that these American companies are technically rigorous, they're very business savvy, they're resourceful and driven."

The space agency has also doubled down on some science heading to the Moon in the coming years. Four of the five NASA payloads flying on Peregrine will also fly on NASA's VIPER rover mission to the Moon later this year or on other CLPS missions. 

If all goes well, Peregrine will make a soft landing on Feb. 23 near the lunar volcanic region known as the Gruithuisen Domes. 

Get the latest updates on this story at FOXWeather.com

Air and SpaceAir and Space