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Israeli scientists count down to first private moon mission

A group of young Israeli scientists are hoping to make history by landing the first Israeli-made private spacecraft on the moon.
Israeli scientists stand next to an unmanned spacecraft which an Israeli team plans to launch into space at the end of the year and to land it on the Moon next year, in Yahud, Israel, July 10, 2018 REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun - RC1D8A2ADEC0
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The Israeli spacecraft Beresheet will be launched toward the moon from Cape Canaveral tomorrow, Feb. 22. Beresheet, Hebrew for “Genesis,” will be the smallest spacecraft ever dispatched to the moon, but its small size is not the lunar lander's only unique feature. It will also be the first such spacecraft to be launched by a private group of individuals — Yariv Bash, Yonatan Winetraub and Kfir Damari — and not by a superpower or even a state. The three young engineers will control their craft from their company headquarters in the town of Yahud, near Israel international Ben-Gurion Airport.

The Bersheet project began in 2010 as an entry in Google’s international Lunar XPRIZE contest, which offered $20 million for a winning project to place a probe on the moon. The three Israeli applicants formed a non-profit organization, calling it SpaceIL, with the double goal of landing the first Israeli craft on the moon and inspiring young Israelis to undertake scientific and technological studies. They subsequently hooked up with Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI) and raised funds from business tycoons such as Morris Kahn, Sheldon Adelson, Steven Grand and other donors.

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