The G3 geomagnetic storm that peaked at Kp=7 overnight on 3 to 4 April has fully resolved. NOAA now forecasts a maximum Kp of 3.67 for Day 5, well below the G1 threshold. The space weather escalation chain that began with an X-class flare at launch is over. 1
NASA has published zero crew radiation dose numbers through the entire event. Six HERA sensors and personal dosimeters aboard Orion collected readings continuously. A NASA Q&A published on Day 4 confirmed the crew will use approximately 5% of their lifetime radiation caps across the full ten-day mission; that is the only quantification offered. 2
The G3 storm's contribution sits somewhere inside that 5%, but exactly where remains undisclosed. What fraction accumulated during the Kp=7 peak is unknown to the public. Across four updates, the pattern is consistent: NASA treats crew dose data as information that will not be shared during flight. The window for real-time disclosure has closed. The storm peaked, the instruments recorded, and the numbers stayed private. For a programme consuming $8.5 billion annually , the public is being asked to trust radiation safety management without seeing the data.
