Intuitive Machines is conducting the first three Nova-C missions for the NASA
Commercial Lunar Payload Services program.
IM-1 (Odysseus) The lander for the first Nova-C mission, IM-1, was named
Odysseus. IM announced that until entering standby mode on February 29, 2024,
Odysseus had transmitted over 350 megabytes of science and engineering data from all payloads, and it will try to revive
Odysseus during the next lunar day.
Odysseus's "rough" - soft Moon landing is the first soft landing of any kind for an American made spacecraft since
Apollo 17, more than 50 years ago, and the first by a
private company. After the landing
Odysseus was resting on the surface at a 30° angle with the horizontal. It has been confirmed by Tim Crain, CTO of Intuitive Machines, that one of the landing leg struts broke off during the landing, and that the lander is resting on a helium tank and/or a computer shelf that was strapped outside of the main fuselage. Based on telemetry received by mission controllers
Odysseus appeared in "good health." The antennas were not vertically aligned as initially planned, and transmissions from the lander were somewhat reduced. Both science and engineering data were received from the lander. It was hoped that a data link could be restored with Odysseus after lunar sunrise occurs at
Malapert A crater, although this was not a requirement of the mission, On March 23 Intuitive Machines announced that Odysseus would not wake up and that the mission had ended.
Odysseus touched down on the Moon in the middle of a lunar day, and was expected to remain functional for approximately six Earth days (until February 27), when the cold lunar night will set in and the solar panels will no longer be able to supply power. IM and NASA held a joint press conference on February 28 to discuss and review the IM-1 mission.
IM-2 (Athena) Intuitive Machines was selected in October 2020 in order to land its second Nova-C lander near the
lunar south pole.
IM-2 Athena was launched on 27 February 2025. The primary payload,
PRIME-1, includes the TRIDENT ice drill to sample ice from below the lunar surface and the MSolo mass spectrometer to measure the amount of ice in the samples. ILO-1 prime contractor
Canadensys was working to deliver "a flight-ready low-cost optical payload for the ILO-1 mission, ruggedized for the Moon South Pole environment". It could potentially be ready for integration on the IM-2 mission. The μNova (Micro-Nova) Hopper was to separate from the Nova-C lander after landing and function as a standalone hopper lander, exploring multiple difficult-to-reach areas such as deep craters on the lunar surface. The MiniPIX TPX3 SPACE payload, provided by the Czech company
ADVACAM, will be onboard the Nova-C lunar lander. This payload is designed to monitor the radiation field on the Moon and help understand how to protect crew and equipment from the negative effects of cosmic rays. This marks the first Czech payload planned to be delivered to the Moon's surface. Space technology company
Lunar Outpost sent their first lunar rover, the Mobile Autonomous Prospecting Platform (MAPP), on this mission in a partnership with
Nokia Bell Labs and Intuitive Machines. MAPP was to collect lunar samples for
NASA under a contract worth just $1, symbolic of a new incentive for the commercial space industry to access resources in space. Photos of the samples and other data will be transmitted through radio equipment and antennas to communicate with the Nova-C lander. A collaboration to demonstrate
4G cellular connectivity, in partnership with
Nokia Bell Labs and NASA will be aboard the lander. Nokia's equipment is a
Network-In-a-Box and was to connect the Nova-C lander with Lunar Outpost's MAPP rover and IM's Micro-Nova Hopper. This
4G/
LTE network will provide more bandwidth than the more conventional
ultra high frequency (UHF) systems used for space communication. Nokia says they hope that future missions will use shared infrastructure to interlink bases on the lunar surface. The
Athena lander fell on its side when landing on 6 March 2025, but its instruments remained partially functional (albeit with a reduced downlink capacity) for a few hours before power ran out, so the mission was judged a partial failure. On March 13, Intuitive Machines shared that, like on the IM-1 mission, the
Athena's
altimeter had failed during landing, leaving its onboard computer without an accurate altitude reading. As a result, the spacecraft struck a plateau, tipped over, and skidded across the lunar surface, rolling once or twice before settling inside the crater. The company's CEO compared it to a baseball player
sliding into a base. During the slide, the spacecraft rolled once or twice, before coming to rest inside the crater. The impact also kicked up
regolith that coated the solar panels in dust, further degrading their performance.
IM-3 (Trinity) NASA selected a Nova-C mission for
CLPS task order CP-11. It will deliver payloads to the
lunar swirl in the
Reiner Gamma region. In August 2021, Intuitive Machines selected SpaceX to launch its third lunar mission, IM-3. In August 2024 the launch of IM-3 was expected to take place no earlier than October 2025. In an investor update on August 7, 2025, IM announced the IM-3 mission was targeting the second half of 2026. The lander will conduct experiments investigating the properties of the unexpected magnetic field that has been detected in the vicinity of the Reiner Gamma swirl. The Reiner Gamma landing site was announced for the first
PRISM opportunity and the JHU
Applied Physics Laboratory's
Lunar Vertex payload was selected to conducted a detailed scientific analysis of the surface and surface environment. David Blewett (APL) is the principal investigator and leads the science team. Lunar Vertex includes payload elements on the Nova-C lander (APL magnetometer,
SwRI plasma spectrometer, and
Redwire camera arrays) and on a
Lunar Outpost rover (APL magnetometer and
Canadensys microscopic imager). APL also provided overall management, systems engineer, SMA, and rover integration and testing. Additional IM-3 payloads include the Cooperative Autonomous Distributed Robotic Explorers (CADRE) rovers, ESA's MoonLIGHT Pointing Actuator (MPAc) and KASI's Lunar Space Environment Monitor (LUSEM). was approved to add the Australian Lunar Experiment Promoting Horticulture (ALEPH-1) payload which will test plant growth and survival in the lunar environment. The lander for the mission has reportedly been named,
Trinity.
IM-4 IM-4 was announced and awarded by NASA in September 2024 for a launch in 2027.
IM-C1 Intuitive Machines have indicated that they are working on a 'commercial' mission, named IM-C1. == Further Nova-C missions ==