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Israel will become only 4th nation to land on the Moon

YEHUD, Israel — Israel continues to push the boundaries of science and technology, this time reaching all the way to the Moon. An Israeli company said today that it hopes to become the first non-governmental entity to land a spacecraft on the moon when it attempts to launch a module later this year.

SpaceIL and the state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries plan to launch their unmanned craft in December, the team said at a press conference at an IAI facility outside Tel Aviv. If it succeeds, Israel would become just the fourth nation to land a craft on the moon, after the U.S., the Soviet Union and China.

SpaceIL will ship the as yet unnamed module to the United States in November ahead of the launch. The 585 kilogram (1,289 pound) landing craft will piggyback on a SpaceX Falcon rocket to enter Earth’s orbit, then slingshot around the planet several times to reach the moon. Upon landing, the craft will relay photographs and collect data about the moon’s magnetism for research by Israel’s Weizmann Institute.

The $95 million project, largely funded by South African-Israeli billionaire Morris Kahn and other donors, aims to land on the moon on Feb. 13. Kahn said it would be “a tremendous achievement.”

SpaceIL was founded in 2011 and originally vied for Google’s Lunar Xprize, which challenged private companies to try to land an unmanned spacecraft on the moon.

But the $20 million competition was scrapped by the tech giant earlier this year when it became clear none of the five companies would meet a March deadline.

Despite financial pitfalls in recent years that nearly saw SpaceIL’s spacecraft grounded permanently, the team is confident that December’s launch will take place on time.

“This project will take the aerospace industry into deep space,” said Kahn, SpaceIL’s main donor and president.

The aim of the mission is not only to put an Israeli spacecraft on the moon, but to inspire a future generation of Israelis to pursue careers in math, science and engineering, said Joseph Weiss, IAI’s president and chief executive.

Israel has emerged as a technological titan in recent decades, producing a profusion of high-tech companies and drawing heavy international investment. It is second only to the United States in filed patents each year and, say many tech analysts, puts much larger countries like China and Japan to shame because of Israel’s tiny size and population of only 8 million people.

The launch is expected to include some experiments and further Israel’s R and D efforts on many scientific fronts. Much of the module’s onboard computers were developed and produced locally–something that only a few countries in the world can do when launching into space.

The lunar mission is scheduled to last just two days after it touches down. But the SpaceIL team hopes that putting an Israeli-made module on the moon could help maintain Israel’s technological momentum for years to come.

“What we’re doing is we’re trying to replicate the Apollo effect in the United States,” Kahn told reporters, referring to the surge in interest in science and engineering after the U.S. space program landed on the moon in 1969.

Israel has gained world-wide respect for its technology because it shares inventions with many Third World countries at no charge. Much of that shared technology revolves around water retention, agricultural improvements, electrifying poor rural areas with solar and bringing modern medicine to the most remote regions of the world. The nation is often the first to appear on the ground after major natural disasters-earning it praise from countries struggling with those disasters. It is known to even help countries that regularly attack it in the United Nations, choosing to help people for humanitarian reasons rather than ignore tragedy for political reasons.

–Press Services

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