Japan on Saturday became only the fifth nation to achieve a soft lunar landing, but its Moon Sniper spacecraft was running out of power because of a problem with its solar battery.
After a nail-biting 20-minute descent, space agency JAXA said its Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, had touched down and communication had been established.
But without the solar cells functioning, JAXA official Hitoshi Kuninaka said, the craft, dubbed the Moon Sniper for its precision technology, would have power for only "several hours."
As mission control scientists prioritized acquiring data while they could, Kuninaka suggested that once the angle of the sun changed, the batteries might work again.
"It is unlikely that the solar battery has failed. It's possible that it is not facing in the originally planned direction," he told a news conference.
"If the descent was not successful, it would have crashed at a very high speed. If that were the case, all functionality of the probe would be lost," he said.
"But data is being sent to Earth," he said.
SLIM is one of several recent lunar missions that have been launched by countries and private firms, 50 years after the first human moon landing.
Crash landings, communication failures and other technical problems are rife. Only four other nations have made it to the moon: The United States, the Soviet Union, China and most recently India.
NASA chief Bill Nelson tweeted his "congratulations [to Japan] on being the historic fifth country to land successfully on the moon."
"We value our partnership in the cosmos and continued collaboration," he said.
JAXA hopes to analyze data acquired during the landing, which will help determine whether the craft achieved the aim of landing within 100 meters (328 feet) of its intended landing spot.
SLIM was aiming for a crater where the moon's mantle, the usually deep inner layer beneath its crust, is believed to be exposed on the surface.
Two probes detached successfully, JAXA said. One with a transmitter and another, a mini-rover designed to trundle around the lunar surface beaming images to Earth.
This shape-shifting mini-rover, slightly bigger than a tennis ball, was co-developed by the firm behind the Transformer toys.
While the accuracy of the touchdown needs to be verified, "I think the mission is a big success," said Jonathan McDowell, astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Several things could have caused the solar panel problem, he told AFP.
"A wire came loose, a wire was connected the wrong way, or the lander is upside down and can't see the sun for some reason," McDowell speculated.
The scientist said he hoped JAXA had been able to download the landing images, but an experiment to study the composition of local rocks may be a lost cause.
"But frankly, that experiment was a bonus and not really that important to the mission," he said.
Two previous Japanese lunar missions — one public and one private — have failed.
In 2022, the country unsuccessfully sent a lunar probe named Omotenashi as part of the United States' Artemis 1 mission.
In April 2023, Japanese startup ispace tried in vain to become the first private company to land on the moon, losing communication with its craft after what it described as a "hard landing.”