Despite successful tests, Israeli moon mission ‎postponed to 2019‎

Israel's moon mission will be postponed to 2019‎, the ‎SpaceIL NGO, who is planning it, announced ‎Wednesday.‎

SpaceIL's dishwasher-size craft was scheduled to be ‎launched into space in December 2018. The ‎organization did not provide the reason for the ‎delay.‎

The spacecraft, whose assembly was recently ‎concluded, has successfully completed a series of ‎integration tests, including extreme atmospheric and ‎acoustic noise test simulating launching and landing ‎conditions, to ensure that its systems will operate ‎once in orbit.‎

Also on Wednesday, the Israel Space Agency announced ‎plans to award SpaceIL a 7.25 million shekel ($2 million) grant ‎to continue developing breakthrough space technology.‎

Support for the NGO will include financing the scientific experiment as part of which the spacecraft will measure the moon's magnetic field, school lectures, educational activities, and a cyber championship, Channel 12 reported.

Last week, the ISA and SpaceIL ‎ announced that once ‎the spacecraft is launched, American space agency ‎NASA will assist in tracking and communicating with ‎its as it prepares to land on the moon. To this end, ‎the spacecraft will be fitted with a laser reflector ‎that would broadcast its lunar location to NASA.‎

SpaceIL will also share with NASA the data collected ‎on the magnetic field at the landing site.‎