Blue Ghost moon lander will help NASA see Earth’s magnetic field ‘breathing’ for 1st time

Firefly Aerospace’s soon-to-launch Blue Ghost moon lander will help NASA better understand our home planet, and how it responds to space weather.

The Lunar Environment Heliospheric X-ray Imager instrument, or LEXI, is one of 10 NASA payloads aboard Blue Ghost, which is set to launch at 1:11 a.m. EST (0611 GMT) on Wednesday (Jan. 15) on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

LEXI, an X-ray imager, includes nine lobster-eye micropore optical elements and is designed to monitor the interaction of solar wind with Earth’s magnetosphere. It will capture low-energy X-rays generated when the solar wind smashes into Earth’s magnetic field at the magnetopause, or the outer boundary of the magnetosphere.

an image of earth and the moon with a blue line looping between them to show stages of a a space mission.

Firefly Aerospace’s Ghost Riders in the Sky moon mission will last 60 days between launch and loss of power following sunset on the lunar surface. (Image credit: Firefly Aerospace)

The instrument will track how the magnetosphere expands and contracts, as well as other shape changes caused by varying strengths of solar wind from the vantage point of the moon, providing a unique, first global view of this activity.

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