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Artemis II Moon Mission
5APR

Second Correction Burn Scrubbed; Navigation Precision Holds

2 min read
16:13UTC

Two of three planned outbound burns have been eliminated because the spacecraft simply does not need them.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Two consecutive burn cancellations confirm systematic navigation precision.

NASA cancelled a second consecutive outbound trajectory correction burn on Day 4, confirming the pattern that began when the first burn was scrubbed on Day 3 . Two of three planned outbound corrections have now been eliminated. 1

The shuttle-heritage OMS-E engine's translunar injection burn was accurate enough to hold course over four days of translunar coast without adjustment. Programme Manager Howard Hu had called navigation performance "outstanding" after the first cancellation; the second makes it structural. Trajectory correction burns exist as insurance against injection error. Cancelling two consecutively indicates the TLI burn's delta-v vector was within a fraction of a metre per second of the planned value.

A third and final outbound burn was scheduled for Day 5 afternoon. Its status had not been confirmed at time of publication. If it too is cancelled, all three planned corrections were unnecessary: a navigation achievement that would redefine mission design expectations for future Artemis flights. Each cancelled burn preserves propellant margin for the return, extending contingency reserves for the flyby phase and powered return.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When a rocket fires toward the Moon, it rarely lands exactly on its planned path. NASA builds in three "correction burns": short engine firings on the way out that steer the spacecraft back onto the correct line if it drifted. Cancelling one correction burn is good. Cancelling two in a row means the original firing was so accurate that there is nothing to correct. It is like driving from London to Edinburgh and realising you haven't touched the steering wheel for four hours because you aimed perfectly at the start.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The elimination of two correction burns reflects advances in three areas that were not simultaneously mature during Apollo.

Ground-based tracking now combines DSN ranging with the O2O laser system, providing velocity precision that radio-only tracking cannot match. The laser's ranging data contributed to the navigation solution that made both burns unnecessary.

The OMS-E's throttle control and gimbal precision were improved between shuttle retirement and Artemis integration. The engine that flew six shuttle missions accumulated operational data that informed its Artemis calibration.

Computational trajectory planning has matured significantly since 1972: modern numerical integration methods model gravitational perturbations from the Sun, Earth, and Moon simultaneously with accuracy Apollo-era computers could not replicate.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Preserved propellant margin extends contingency reserves for the flyby return burn and re-entry, reducing the mission's highest-consequence risk events.

  • Opportunity

    If the third outbound burn is also cancelled, navigation requirements for Artemis III can be revised downward, potentially reducing mission timeline and cost.

First Reported In

Update #4 · Day 5: Lunar Gravity Reclaims Humans for the First Time Since 1972

NASA· 5 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
ESA
ESA
The European Service Module has operated without anomaly for five consecutive days, with the OMS-E engine's translunar injection precision directly responsible for eliminating both correction burns. ESA's hardware contribution is the mission's highest-performing subsystem.
NASA
NASA
NASA cancelled a second consecutive outbound correction burn and confirmed Orion in lunar gravitational dominance, while declining to publish any crew radiation dose data through a complete G3 storm cycle. Bipartisan congressional rejection of its $18.8 billion FY2027 budget proposal means the agency faces a political fight even as its spacecraft performs above expectations.
Dual-framework nations
Dual-framework nations
Signing both the Artemis Accords and the ILRS framework is rational hedging, not defection; smaller nations maximise access without exclusive commitment. Lunar governance is genuinely multipolar, and the US coalition count of 61 overstates exclusivity.
Boeing / Northrop Grumman
Boeing / Northrop Grumman
SLS component production spans more than 40 US states, giving the industrial base strong political protection regardless of commercial alternatives. Congressional mandates guarantee contracts through FY2029, insulating the supply chain from technical programme changes.
NASA Office of Inspector General
NASA Office of Inspector General
The IRB heat shield findings should have been published before launch. The Starship HLS is two years behind schedule with a worsening manual control dispute. NASA has no crew rescue capability for lunar surface operations. The programme is proceeding with documented, unresolved risks.
SpaceX
SpaceX
Starship HLS development is ongoing. SpaceX disputes the characterisation of the manual crew control requirement as unresolved, maintaining its autonomous landing architecture meets mission safety objectives. The company has not publicly responded to the OIG's worsening-trend characterisation.