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M7.5 solar flare
Event

M7.5 solar flare

M7.5 solar flare from Region 4409 on 4 April 2026, during Artemis II lunar transit.

Last refreshed: 14 April 2026

Key Question

Did the M7.5 flare push Artemis II crew radiation doses over NASA career limits?

Timeline for M7.5 solar flare

#1014 Apr
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Common Questions
Was the Artemis II crew exposed to dangerous radiation from the solar flare?
NASA has not released the crew's radiation dose data as of 14 April 2026. The M7.5 flare on 4 April occurred during deep-space transit; the full nine-day dose record remains withheld.Source:
What is an M7.5 solar flare?
An M7.5 is near the top of the M-class band on the NOAA solar flare scale, the second-highest category. It produces elevated proton flux and can cause R2 (moderate) high-frequency radio blackouts.Source: NOAA Space Weather
How dangerous is a solar flare during a Moon mission?
Risk depends on location and shielding. Orion's crew was in deep space during the 4 April M7.5 flare; NASA cancelled its onboard radiation shelter demonstration on Day 8, leaving the actual dose unconfirmed.Source:

Background

An M7.5-class solar flare erupted from Active Region 4409 on 4 April 2026, during the Artemis II lunar transit. The event caused an R2 (moderate) high-frequency radio blackout on the sunlit side of Earth. At the time of the flare, Orion and its four crew members were in deep space between the Earth and Moon, placing them outside the most intense particle-flux zones. NASA did not disclose the crew's radiation dose during or after the event .

M-class flares are the second-highest category on the NOAA scale (below X-class). An M7.5 is near the top of that band, producing elevated proton flux and geomagnetic effects but not at the level of a major radiation emergency. Region 4409 remained active through the mission: a second flare from the same region on 9 April also produced geomagnetic effects during the final approach and re-entry phase .

The 4 April flare sits within the nine-day dose record that NASA has withheld since splashdown, alongside the G3 geomagnetic storm on Day 4 and the R3 radio blackout on Day 9. Independent scientists cannot verify whether accumulated doses across these events approached or breached NASA career limits, because the agency has directed dose data to the research-solicitation process rather than operational release.