A private US company says it has landed a spacecraft close to the Moon's South Pole but fears the machine is not upright.
The Athena spacecraft is communicating with Earth, but is not in the "correct attitude", Intuitive Machines chief executive said in a press conference.
The company hopes the scientific instruments on board can still be deployed, including a hopping robot designed to explore a nearby crater and the first lunar mobile communications antenna.
It is the second time an Intuitive Machines spacecraft has landed in an irregular position on the Moon.