SCIENCE
Japan’s ispace is set to attempt a lunar landing on the Moon’s far north—again.
By Aniket Chakraborty
June 6, 2025
Arrow
Image Credit | @ispace_inc | X
Arrow
Their lander, named
Resilience
, carries a camera-equipped rover and a tiny red house.
2
Arrow
The rover,
Tenacious
, will explore Mare Frigoris—also called the Sea of Cold.
3
Arrow
It’s a second chance for ispace after their first lander crashed two years ago.
4
Image Credit | @ispace_inc | X
Arrow
The rover can scoop lunar dirt and send images—part of NASA’s research push.
5
Arrow
Also aboard: a Swedish artist’s Moonhouse, adding culture to cosmic science.
6
Arrow
At just 11 pounds, the rover will crawl in tight circles near the lander base.
7
Arrow
The goal: prove private firms can sustainably explore and operate on the Moon.
8
Arrow
If successful, ispace plans an even larger lander launch by 2027.
9
Image Credit | @ispace_inc | X
From failure to resilience, Japan joins the global race to commercialize the Moon.
10