March 2, 2025
In the small hours of 2 March 2025, a control room full of engineers in Texas watched a spacecraft named for a rare firefly descend toward Mare Crisium, the Sea of Crises. Firefly Aerospace had never landed anything anywhere. Commercial lunar history to that point was a ledger of heartbreak: Beresheet crashed, Peregrine never arrived, Odysseus tipped over. At 3:34 a.m. Eastern, Blue Ghost's engine cut off, the dust settled, and chief engineer Will Coogan delivered the verdict that brought the room to its feet.
The mission, nicknamed 'Ghost Riders in the Sky,' had launched on a Falcon 9 from Kennedy Space Center on 15 January 2025, sharing the rocket with Japan's ispace Resilience lander. After a 45-day cruise, Blue Ghost set down close to its target near Mons Latreille, an ancient volcanic dome, standing upright and stable. Aboard were ten NASA instruments flown under a $101.5 million Commercial Lunar Payload Services task order, from a heat-flow drill to a regolith-sampling vacuum.
Then came fourteen days of relentless work through 346 hours of lunar daylight. The LuGRE experiment locked onto GPS and Galileo signals at the Moon, the first satellite-navigation fix ever achieved on the lunar surface. On 14 March, while Earth watched a blood-moon lunar eclipse, Blue Ghost photographed the same event from the other side: a total solar eclipse, Earth's silhouette ringed in light, seen from the Moon by a working commercial spacecraft.
Blue Ghost transmitted 119 gigabytes of data home, including 51 gigabytes of science, then captured high-definition images of the lunar sunset, data for studying the horizon glow reported since the Surveyor and Apollo era. It kept operating for about five hours into the freezing lunar night before its batteries faded on 16 March. Every payload had worked. Its old ride-mate Resilience crashed during its own attempt that June, sharpening the contrast: Firefly, on its first try, had made it look easy.
“You all stuck the landing. We're on the Moon.”
Launch
15 Jan 2025, Falcon 9 from Kennedy Space Center
Landing
2 Mar 2025, 3:34 a.m. EST
Landing site
Mare Crisium, near Mons Latreille
NASA payloads
10 instruments, $101.5M CLPS task order
Data returned
119 GB total, 51 GB of science
Surface operations
≈14 days, plus 5 hours into lunar night
The lander is named for the blue ghost firefly, one of the few firefly species that glows blue-white, and the mission flew under the call sign 'Ghost Riders in the Sky.'
NASA's LuGRE payload acquired GPS and Galileo signals on the lunar surface, the first GNSS navigation fix ever achieved on the Moon.
On 14 March, while people on Earth watched a blood-moon lunar eclipse, Blue Ghost photographed the same alignment from the Moon as a total solar eclipse, with Earth blocking the Sun.
It survived five hours past lunar sunset, sending home imagery of the sunset glow that astronauts and Surveyor probes had reported decades earlier.
Its Falcon 9 ride-share partner, Japan's ispace Resilience lander, crashed attempting its own landing three months later, underscoring how rare a flawless first landing is.
Blue Ghost rescued the premise of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program. After Peregrine's failure and Odysseus's sideways landing, CLPS needed proof that a fixed-price commercial lander could deliver complete mission success, and Firefly provided it: upright landing, all ten payloads operated, more data than promised, and bonus science from an eclipse and a lunar sunset. It made Firefly the first commercial company to fully succeed on the Moon, anchored follow-on Blue Ghost contracts, and gave NASA confidence that buying lunar delivery as a service could underpin Artemis-era science. Every commercial lunar mission since has been measured against it.