sunday, another us company became the 1st to successfully put a commercial craft on the moon. latanya harrison is a fellow at the outer space institute. i spoke to her a short while ago and she says, there's a lot of interesting work to be done if the vessel manages to function properly. the bigger picture is that we're trying to explore the south pole origin of the moon because it has a bunch of these areas called permanently shadowed regions where sunlight never reaches them at any point in the year. and so sight of some detected ice hiding in those regions, which is really good for asked us to use on team emissions in the future. but we've never done any close up inspection of them before. so the blue goes leader from firefly, aerospace, certainly the success of the few days ago. and then hopefully the payloads, armless intuitive machine vendor are both designed to kind of characterize what this ice is like. what the water content is of the soil or the regular width is we call it a moon in these areas is like and also do some technology demonstrations as well. so to test how easy or not eas