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Israel’s First Lunar Mission Launched into Space

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Israel’s First Lunar Mission Launched into Space
The Beresheet spacecraft successfully blasted off from Florida on Friday, embarking on a seven-week journey to the moon. Powered by SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket, the launch is the first ever privately-funded moon mission

IsraelDefense | 22/02/2019

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The Beresheet spacecraft launches aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket (Photo: AP)

The first Israeli lunar spacecraft Beresheet (Hebrew for Genesis) was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 3:45 a.m. (Israel time) on Friday (8:45 p.m. Thursday EST), aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

The first stage entry burn completed uneventfully less than three minutes after lift-off. At 4:23 am, 38 minutes after takeoff, Beresheet successfully detached from the Falcon 9 rocket, in the first test of its ability to function under its own power. Initial data was then received from the spacecraft and the landing legs deployed soon after, at 4:25.

The spacecraft will orbit the Earth in elliptical orbits and will travel 6.5 million kilometers – the longest distance ever traveled to the moon. During these orbits, the spacecraft will raise its orbit around Earth until it reaches the proximity of the moon. When the spacecraft is in lunar orbit, about ten days before landing, it will orbit it until the appropriate time and an autonomous landing process will begin. The route will take about two months until the expected landing on April 11, 2019.

The spacecraft, which weighs only 600 kilograms, is considered the smallest to land on the moon. The height of Beresheet is 1.5 meters, it is about two meters wide and it carries fuel which is approximately 75 percent of its weight. Its maximum speed will reach 10 km per second (36,000 km/h).

Hundreds of people gathered at IAI’s facility in Yehud to watch a live feed of the launch from Florida. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who also arrived at the control room, referred to the initiative as “a great step for Israel, and a huge step for Israel’s technology.” The prime minister called Israel a “small but huge country” noting that despite its smaller land mass and population compared to the other participating nations, Israel is a “giant in initiative, huge in achievements.”

President Reuven Rivlin also lauded the launch. “Mazal Tov, the State of Israel, you have a spacecraft. If Beresheet travels on the difficult path and lands on the Moon, Israel will be the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the Moon. It used to be imaginary, but now it's reality. A tremendous step for the state. A first-rate scientific, technological and educational project.”

The $100 million (NIS 370 million) spacecraft is a joint venture between private companies SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries, funded almost entirely by private donations, primarily by Morris Kahn. If the project is successful, Israel will become the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the moon.

“The successful launch positions Israel on the map,” said Morris Kahn, President of SpaceIL. “History has been made. We look forward to an amazing seven-week journey that will mark yet another historic event. We cross our fingers for Beresheet. Thank you to the amazing teams if SpaceIL and IAI.”

Ido Antebi, CEO of the SpaceIL NGO: “We arrived at the launch with a fully tested spacecraft on its way for a highly challenging mission. I am proud of SpaceIL and IAI teams who made this accomplishment possible with professional work, perseverance and collaboration, if everything goes well, the spacecraft will enter a cruising orbit around Earth within an hour from the launch. In the next two months, Beresheet will continue its challenging journey until it lands on the moon.”

Once landed on the moon, the spacecraft carrying the Israeli flag will begin taking photographs of the landing site and a “selfie” to prove it has indeed landed on the moon. The spacecraft has an important scientific mission to complete: measure the moon’s magnetic field as part of an experiment carried out in collaboration with the Weizmann Institute.

NASA is also participating in the mission under an agreement entered with Israel Space Agency. NASA has installed a laser retroreflector on the spacecraft and will assist in communicating the spacecraft on the moon.

The spacecraft also carries a "time capsule" – a huge database of hundreds of digital files ranging from details about SpaceIL, the spacecraft and the crew of the project, national symbols, cultural items and materials collected from the general public over the years to be placed on the moon by the spacecraft. Since the spacecraft is not expected to return to Earth, the information it carries is destined to remain on the moon for an indefinite period and may be found and distributed by future generations.


https://www.israeldefense.co.il/en/node/37559
 
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Love them or hate them, you have to applaud the immense amount of engineering and innovation that is pouring out of Israel at the moment. They have hard working scientists in the private and government sectors.

When I see stuff like this I always wonder how Israel can manage to pull off such amazing feats of technology while at the same time elect complete lunatics like their current government. Or how they can have such bright minds such as these co exist with such backwards people like the settlers.

Then i take a good look at my country and I understand. This is a sad world.
 
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When I see stuff like this I always wonder how Israel can manage to pull off such amazing feats of technology while at the same time elect complete lunatics like their current government. Or how they can have such bright minds such as these co exist with such backwards people like the settlers.

When you are confronted by such cognitive dissonance as you above describe, perhaps it is time to examine and question your assumptions. Consider: maybe their current political leaders are not lunatics and maybe their settlers are not "backward". Maybe all involved in the Israeli project are trying their utmost to preserve their Jewish/Israeli culture and that that culture is capable of producing the technological successes you are applauding. Maybe pride of place and culture is necessary to have such "success" as witnessed by the accomplishments of the Americans, the Japanese, the Chinese, the Europeans and the Russians, all of whom are proud of their own cultures.
 
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ISRAELI LUNAR SPACECRAFT BERESHEET COMPLETES FIRST MANEUVER TOWARDS MOON
After two months, it is set to land on the moon in the Mare Tranquillitatis plain (also known as the Sea of Tranquility), on April 11.
BY JERUSALEM POST STAFF

FEBRUARY 24, 2019 15:42

3 minute read.

436144

Beresheet launches of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida.. (photo credit: SPACEX COURTESY OF SPACEIL AND IAI)

Just hours ago, Israel's first Israeli lunar spacecraft Beresheet - Genesis in English - successfully completed its first maneuver towards the moon after detaching from its launcher and completing its planned orbit of the Earth.

The goal of the set of planned maneuevers are to eventually steer the craft into the moon’s orbit when it overlaps with the Earth's.

After two months, it is set to land on the moon in the Mare Tranquillitatis plain (also known as the Sea of Tranquility), on April 11.

Scientists and tech staff at Israel Aerospace Industries headquarters were notified of the spacecraft’s high sensitivity toward the sun’s rays in the star trackers on board, but are hopeful that this issue can be resolved en route to the moon.

Today's maneuver towards the moon took into account those problems identified by the star tracker systems and scientists decided to move forward with the mission.

Beresheet, with the go ahead from mission control, turned on its engine for the first time and successfully made its first manuever towards the moon just 69,400 km from Earth's surface. The spacecraft during this maneuver will at some point will come within 600 km of the Earth's surface as it prepares for it's next planned maneuver Monday night.

Israel made its first step to the moon late Thursday night, as the lunar spacecraft Beresheet launched from the coast of Cape Canaveral, in a mission that, if successful, will place the Jewish state in an exclusive club of nations capable of landing on the lunar surface.

If successful, the landing on the moon will make Israel the fourth country in the world to land on the lunar surface, after the former Soviet Union, the United States and China. It will be the first such space capsule to land on the moon due to a private initiative, rather than a government-funded enterprise.

The project has been spearheaded by SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries and has been in the making for several years.
“Eight years ago, we ventured on this journey that is now nearing completion.... I couldn’t be prouder than to give this gift to the people of Israel,” the president of SpaceIL and its largest funder, Morris Kahn, said. Other donations came from Dr. Miriam and Sheldon Adelson, the Science and Technology Ministry, the ISA, Weizmann and various other private individuals.

The CEO of IAI Nimrod Sheffer, thanked the joint team of SpaceIL and IAI who worked tirelessly to complete the project, for their professionalism, determination, faith and dedication.

The spacecraft is the smallest such craft by weight – measuring only 1.5 m. by 2 m. at 600 kg. (around 1,300 lbs.) and costs only $100 million – compared to other larger and more expensive projects.

“For many months, our teams and IAI’s were engaged in testing the spacecraft and its systems, conducting complex experiments and preparing for every possible scenario of the mission,” CEO of SpaceIL Ido Antebi said.

The spacecraft will traverse the longest distance ever to the moon – some 6.5 million km. (around 4 million miles) before it lands. Beresheet will hurdle through space at up to speeds of 10 km. per second (36,000 km/hr).

Earlier this week, President Reuven Rivlin noted that not only is this a national and historic achievement, it also aims to inspire young Israelis to study STEM-related fields and pursue their dreams of space travel.

In addition, the craft holds a “time capsule” of hundreds of files digitized on a disk, containing drawings by Israeli children, the Bible, the national anthem, prayers, Israeli songs and a map of the State of Israel, among other cultural items.

Beresheet is scheduled to be stationed on the moon for generations to come.

https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/I...-completes-first-maneuver-towards-moon-581627
 
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Israel’s First Lunar Mission Launched into Space
The Beresheet spacecraft successfully blasted off from Florida on Friday, embarking on a seven-week journey to the moon. Powered by SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket, the launch is the first ever privately-funded moon mission

IsraelDefense | 22/02/2019

Send to a friend
A+A-Size
Share on
Share on
AP_19053077057986.jpg

The Beresheet spacecraft launches aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket (Photo: AP)

The first Israeli lunar spacecraft Beresheet (Hebrew for Genesis) was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 3:45 a.m. (Israel time) on Friday (8:45 p.m. Thursday EST), aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

The first stage entry burn completed uneventfully less than three minutes after lift-off. At 4:23 am, 38 minutes after takeoff, Beresheet successfully detached from the Falcon 9 rocket, in the first test of its ability to function under its own power. Initial data was then received from the spacecraft and the landing legs deployed soon after, at 4:25.

The spacecraft will orbit the Earth in elliptical orbits and will travel 6.5 million kilometers – the longest distance ever traveled to the moon. During these orbits, the spacecraft will raise its orbit around Earth until it reaches the proximity of the moon. When the spacecraft is in lunar orbit, about ten days before landing, it will orbit it until the appropriate time and an autonomous landing process will begin. The route will take about two months until the expected landing on April 11, 2019.

The spacecraft, which weighs only 600 kilograms, is considered the smallest to land on the moon. The height of Beresheet is 1.5 meters, it is about two meters wide and it carries fuel which is approximately 75 percent of its weight. Its maximum speed will reach 10 km per second (36,000 km/h).

Hundreds of people gathered at IAI’s facility in Yehud to watch a live feed of the launch from Florida. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who also arrived at the control room, referred to the initiative as “a great step for Israel, and a huge step for Israel’s technology.” The prime minister called Israel a “small but huge country” noting that despite its smaller land mass and population compared to the other participating nations, Israel is a “giant in initiative, huge in achievements.”

President Reuven Rivlin also lauded the launch. “Mazal Tov, the State of Israel, you have a spacecraft. If Beresheet travels on the difficult path and lands on the Moon, Israel will be the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the Moon. It used to be imaginary, but now it's reality. A tremendous step for the state. A first-rate scientific, technological and educational project.”

The $100 million (NIS 370 million) spacecraft is a joint venture between private companies SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries, funded almost entirely by private donations, primarily by Morris Kahn. If the project is successful, Israel will become the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the moon.

“The successful launch positions Israel on the map,” said Morris Kahn, President of SpaceIL. “History has been made. We look forward to an amazing seven-week journey that will mark yet another historic event. We cross our fingers for Beresheet. Thank you to the amazing teams if SpaceIL and IAI.”

Ido Antebi, CEO of the SpaceIL NGO: “We arrived at the launch with a fully tested spacecraft on its way for a highly challenging mission. I am proud of SpaceIL and IAI teams who made this accomplishment possible with professional work, perseverance and collaboration, if everything goes well, the spacecraft will enter a cruising orbit around Earth within an hour from the launch. In the next two months, Beresheet will continue its challenging journey until it lands on the moon.”

Once landed on the moon, the spacecraft carrying the Israeli flag will begin taking photographs of the landing site and a “selfie” to prove it has indeed landed on the moon. The spacecraft has an important scientific mission to complete: measure the moon’s magnetic field as part of an experiment carried out in collaboration with the Weizmann Institute.

NASA is also participating in the mission under an agreement entered with Israel Space Agency. NASA has installed a laser retroreflector on the spacecraft and will assist in communicating the spacecraft on the moon.

The spacecraft also carries a "time capsule" – a huge database of hundreds of digital files ranging from details about SpaceIL, the spacecraft and the crew of the project, national symbols, cultural items and materials collected from the general public over the years to be placed on the moon by the spacecraft. Since the spacecraft is not expected to return to Earth, the information it carries is destined to remain on the moon for an indefinite period and may be found and distributed by future generations.


https://www.israeldefense.co.il/en/node/37559

Congrats!
 
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Love them or hate them, you have to applaud the immense amount of engineering and innovation that is pouring out of Israel at the moment. They have hard working scientists in the private and government sectors.

When I see stuff like this I always wonder how Israel can manage to pull off such amazing feats of technology while at the same time elect complete lunatics like their current government. Or how they can have such bright minds such as these co exist with such backwards people like the settlers.

Then i take a good look at my country and I understand. This is a sad world.


Being a fanatic or a lunatic doesn’t necessarily mean that you are a dumb person with a backward and self- destructive mentality that will keep your country backward like we see in many Muslim countries for example.

Nazis were quite fanatical in their ideas and were lead by a linatic but they created an industrial and military machine that managed to conquer huge parts of Europe in months. There is no need to mention their scientists and innovators.
The USSR was lead by a fanatic like Stalin but after all of his atrocities he turned the country into an industrial giant a nuclear power and a Superpower that eventually became the first space power too.


Huge segments of Israel’s population and their policians might be very fanatical in defending their country and nation and they strictly follow their national interests and protect what they believe is theirs but for me that is not something negative. Jews in general highly value education and literacy and it have been that way for thousands of years. Another Jewish tradition is to stay united and help one another. All that leads to their scientific, economical, business and technological successes.

Israel’s leaders created the right environment in a hostile land surrounded by enemies for the State to develop and go forward. The Jews from all over the world who are very influential help them a lot too with their finances, influence and know how.
 
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You can copy paste all the articles of jpost and make 100s articles
and being so much anti Iranian i wonder if your pseudo is a fake
hater another one :D
 
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Wrf are israeliz doing with mooncrafts?? They should first establish a stable firm homeland on earth first! Moon can wait
 
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ISRAEL’S BERESHEET LUNAR SHUTTLE COMPLETES ANOTHER MANEUVER ON WAY TO MOON
“The maneuver was executed as expected,” Ido Anteby, CEO of SpaceIL, said. “Beresheet’s main engine was activated for four minutes.”
BY MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN

MARCH 1, 2019 04:58

1 minute read.

436143

Picture of the spacecraft Beresheet. (photo credit: Courtesy)

Israel’s Beresheet (“Genesis in English), the Jewish state’s first lunar spacecraft, successfully completed another maneuver on Wednesday at around 9:30 p.m. Israel time, according to a release by Space IL.

“The maneuver was executed as expected,” Ido Anteby, CEO of SpaceIL, said. “Beresheet’s main engine was activated for four minutes.”

Earlier in the week, Beresheet experienced some technical difficulties and had to cancel a maneuver planned for the spacecraft. Since then, SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), the organizations that spearheaded the projects, completed examination of the computer resets and implemented corrective measures.

“All the spacecraft systems are working well, confirmed Opher Doron, general manager of the Space Division at IAI. “There is no big problem on any of the systems. We conducted a lot of testing on the overall spacecraft.”

He said it is “quite normal” for a new spacecraft to have some “teething problems” in its first days.

“We have overcome them all and the moon seems to be getting within reach,” Doron said. “There will probably be some more surprises around the way and hopefully we will manage to deal with them, as well.”

So far, the shuttle has broken the Israeli speed record, traveling at 10.5 kilometers per second. The spacecraft is on its way to an elliptical orbit where the farthest point from Earth is at 131,000 kilometers, which will break the Israeli distance record.

The next maneuver is planned in another week.

Added Anteby, “We are on our way to the moon!”

https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/I...pletes-another-maneuver-on-way-to-moon-582138
 
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