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Artemis II Moon Mission
10APR

Primary Solar Threat Decays Before Re-entry

2 min read
11:48UTC

Region 4412, the sunspot group identified as the main return-leg threat, decayed to a spotless plage by 9 April. The re-entry radiation window is now the safest of the entire mission.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

The primary solar threat has collapsed, giving Orion the safest radiation window of the mission for re-entry.

Region 4412, the central-disk sunspot group identified as the primary return-leg threat on 7 April , decayed to a spotless H-alpha plage at N11W29 by 9 April 1. Zero flare risk from that region. The active flare threat migrated to Regions 4409 (Beta-Delta at N01W71) and 4413 (Beta-Gamma at N08W74), both rotating off the western limb and geometrically unable to direct a significant event at Earth by splashdown.

NOAA forecasts a 5% solar radiation storm probability on 10 April, the lowest of the entire mission 2. A G1 minor geomagnetic storm is possible from a coronal hole high-speed stream, though it poses no crew risk during re-entry. This is a sharp contrast to the G3 storm that peaked at Kp=7 on Day 4 , which prompted concerns about crew dose exposure.

Radiation dose data remains unpublished for the eighth consecutive day , . Region 4400 is expected to rotate back into Earth-facing view between 9 and 11 April, a post-splashdown concern rather than a re-entry one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Sun constantly fires charged particles into space. Certain sunspot regions — darker, magnetically intense patches on the Sun's surface — can produce large solar flares that send a wave of radiation toward Earth. NASA monitors these regions to protect the crew. The region that had been the main concern for the crew's journey home, Region 4412, broke apart and faded before it could produce a significant flare. The re-entry window is now the calmest solar period of the entire mission.

What could happen next?
  • Post-splashdown rotation of Region 4400 into Earth-facing view poses no crew risk but will test whether NOAA's Artemis II monitoring protocols transfer to routine space weather operations.

  • The favourable re-entry solar window does not validate the shelter demo cancellation — it means the worst-case scenario the cancellation created did not materialise.

First Reported In

Update #7 · Orion Faces the Heat Shield It Fixed

NOAA/USAF Space Weather Prediction Center· 9 Apr 2026
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