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January 24, 2025

A private US spacecraft headed to the moon captures a glorious view of Earth

This photo provided by Firefly Aerospace shows Firefly’s Blue Ghost lunar lander captures the Blue Marble while in Earth orbit on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025. Credit: Firefly Aerospace via AP
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This photo provided by Firefly Aerospace shows Firefly’s Blue Ghost lunar lander captures the Blue Marble while in Earth orbit on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025. Credit: Firefly Aerospace via AP

A private U.S. spacecraft bound for the moon has captured stunning images of Earth one week into its flight.

Still circling Earth, Firefly Aerospace's lunar fired its thrusters Thursday to put it on a path to reach the in over a month. Dubbed Blue Ghost, the beamed back photos and video of the Blue Marble, our planet. The Texas company released the images Friday.

It carries experiments for NASA, part of the space agency's effort to return astronauts to the moon this decade.

Blue Ghost is one of two lunar landers launched from Florida by SpaceX on Jan. 15. It's targeting a moon touchdown on March 2. The other lander is sponsored by the Japanese company ispace and taking an even longer route, with a landing in late May or early June.

It's the first moonshot for Firefly and the second for ispace, which crashed its first lander into the moon in 2023. Tokyo-based ispace's latest lander, Resilience, is still orbiting Earth and performing all its maneuvers to close in on the moon.

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A private U.S. spacecraft, Blue Ghost, has captured images of Earth while en route to the moon. The lunar lander, launched by SpaceX, is carrying NASA experiments and aims to land on the moon by March 2. Another lander, Resilience, from the Japanese company ispace, is also on a lunar mission, with a planned landing in late May or early June. This marks Firefly Aerospace's first moon mission and ispace's second attempt after a previous crash.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.