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Artemis II moon launch advances as NASA calls Starliner a 'Type-A mishap'
Summary
Artemis II completed a wet dress rehearsal that met its main goals and a flight readiness review is scheduled for next week; NASA also released a report labeling the 2024 Boeing Starliner test a 'Type-A mishap'.
Content
Artemis II has completed a wet dress rehearsal that mission managers said met the main objectives, and officials described lower fuel leak levels than in earlier tests. A detailed flight readiness review is planned late next week and agency leaders said a launch attempt in about two weeks is possible. The update came after NASA released a report on the 2024 Boeing Starliner crewed test and relabeled that mission a "Type-A mishap." Agency leaders and Boeing representatives spoke of both technical fixes and cultural changes.
Known details:
- Mission managers reported the Artemis II fueling rehearsal met key goals and showed reduced fuel-leak readings compared with earlier tests.
- A flight readiness review is scheduled for late next week, and agency officials said a launch attempt could occur in roughly two weeks.
- NASA released a 300-page report on the 2024 Boeing Starliner crewed test and described it as a "Type-A mishap," the most serious level short of a fatal accident.
- Boeing said it has made progress on technical repairs and is addressing team culture; NASA leaders said the mishap investigation should inform how all human spaceflight programs are managed.
Summary:
The immediate status is that Artemis II has advanced through a major practice fueling and faces a formal flight readiness review next week ahead of a possible launch window in about two weeks. The Starliner report and the agency's description of that test as a Type-A mishap are now public and are slated to be presented to Congress, with officials saying the findings should drive changes across human spaceflight programs.
