Sideways touchdown cuts short Odysseus lander's moon mission
Flight engineers are expecting to lose contact on Tuesday with a private US lunar lander, Odysseus, cutting short its mission by five days. It made history last Thursday by becoming the first US spacecraft to land on the moon in more than 50 years. But the company behind the spacecraft, Intuitive Machines, said it came in too fast and one of its six feet caught on the lunar surface causing it to fall over. The lander was due to conduct a suite of experiments that it was hoped would provide data useful for future missions to the moon. NASA, which plans to land astronauts near the south pole in ...