“NASA made a bet a few years ago that commercial companies could take scientific experiments to the moon on a lower budget than the agency could.

Last year, that was a bad bet. The first NASA-financed spacecraft missed the moon entirely. The second landed but fell over.

But this month, a robotic lander named Blue Ghost, built by Firefly Aerospace of Cedar Park, Texas, succeeded from start to finish.

On March 16, the mood at Firefly’s mission operations outside Austin was a mix of happy and melancholic. There was nothing more to worry about, nothing left to do — except watch the company’s spacecraft die.

A quarter-million miles away, the sun had already set on Mare Crisium, the lunar lava plain where Blue Ghost had collected scientific observations for two weeks.

For the solar-powered spacecraft, the hours remaining were numbered and few.”

From New York Times.