Names | ILO-1 (Flagship Mission to Lunar South Pole, launching 2025-26 TBD) ILO-2 (Backup Mission, TBD) |
---|---|
Mission type | Technology, Astronomy |
Operator | International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA Hawai'i) |
Website | https://iloa.org/the-ilo-mission/ |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft type | TBD |
Manufacturer | Lander: TBD Telescope: Canadensys Aerospace |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 2025-26 (planned)[1] |
Rocket | TBD |
Launch site | TBD |
Contractor | TBD |
Moon lander | |
Main telescope | |
Name | ILO-1 |
Type | TBD |
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]
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]
Werner 2013
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