On 11 April 2019, the lander
crash-landed on the lunar surface. An Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU2)
gyroscope failed during the braking procedure on approach to the landing site, and the ground control crew was unable to reset the individual component due to a sudden loss of communications with the control network. By the time communications were restored, the craft's main engine had already been inactive for an extended period. The engine was brought back online following a system-wide reset; however, the craft had already lost too much altitude to slow its descent sufficiently. The final telemetry reading indicated that at an altitude of the craft was still traveling at over , resulting in a total loss on impact with the lunar surface. Prior to impact, the probe had been able to take two last photographs: a view of itself against the Moon, and a closer shot of the Moon's surface. The lander's final resting position is , • M1236487095L (before impact) • M1098722768L (before impact – 2012-08-04 – 12:31:41, line 24245, sample 4031) • M1101080642R (before impact – 2012-08-31 – 19:29:35, line 14398, sample 1424) • M1310536929R (after impact)
Post-mission failure investigation Several malfunctions plus
human-in-the-loop decisions led to the crash landing during the final lunar descent. These were the result of limited funding; poor systems engineering design with a lack of redundancy in some systems and an inability of telemetry-software updates to remain active following system reboot; as well as human decisions about which path to take after the failure of one of the two redundant accelerometers (
inertial measurement units, or IMUs) during the final lunar descent. A decision was made by the control team—which could have continued the descent with a single IMU, or tried to reinitiate the IMU which had shut down—to restart the second IMU. == Wreckage ==