What would happen if the Artemis II crew were hit by solar radiation?

It wouldn’t exactly be good (Picture: Metro/Getty)

If there’s one thing the Artemis II should be worried about (other than their toilet breaking) it’s solar flares, an expert has told Metro.

A towering Nasa rocket named Intergry blasted off yesterday evening, sending four astronauts moonbound for the first time in half a century.

Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen will spend 10 days inside the minivan-sized Orion deep-space capsule.

The main point of the mission is simple: testing important systems aboard Orion, including life support and deep-space communications.

But another is just how much the Orion can protect the crew from space weather.

Our sun is an angry ball of churning plasma, constantly spewing radiation with the strength of millions of volcanic eruptions.

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NASA's Artemis II mission to fly by the moon, comprising of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion crew capsule, lifts off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. April 1, 2026. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The rocket lifted from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida (Picture: Reuters)

Some of these bursts, called solar flares, can make their way to Earth and fry satellites, mangle GPS networks and cause the Northern Lights.

Us Earthlings don’t need to worry about flares that much, as the Earth’s invisible shield against them, the magnetic field, keeps us safe.

Astronauts in the cosmos, however, have no such protection, Dr Ben Clewer, a space weather system developer at the Surrey Space Centre, tells Metro.

He says: ‘This is a major concern for space travel beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO), as the travel is outside the protection of the Earth’s magnetic field.

‘The impacts are wide ranging, from causing the aurora on Earth, radio communication interruptions, errors in electronic systems, an increased radiation dose to the crew and ultimately system damage to spacecraft.

‘Limiting the impacts of any increased radiation will be an important aspect of the Artemis mission as space radiation can put astronauts at significant risk for radiation sickness, increased lifetime risk for cancer, central nervous system effects, and degenerative diseases.’

How could astronauts protect themselves?

Dr Clewer says that the solar events that cause the most damage travel from the sun to Earth ‘in less than 20 minutes’.

If that happened, the spacefarers would shelter inside two stowage lockers underneath their seats.

The Orion Spacecraft: Crew Module (Picture: Metro)
The Orion capsule is roomy (Picture: Metro)

The dense material the Orion is made of will act as a shield, Nasa says.

The capsule also has a radiation sensor, called a Hybrid Electronic Radiation Assessor, that’ll raise the alarm if it detects solar flares.

Dr Clewer adds: ‘The particles won’t be fully shielded against, however, and the capsule could experience impacts.

‘The astronauts might see an increase in flashes with their eyes closed (where particles interact with their retinas), but in the worst case, if the solar flare was really large – the type that occurs once every 100 years on average, would be radiation sickness for the astronauts and/or failures in the control systems of the spacecraft.’

Dr Clewer warns that a sunspot, which shoots out solar flares as well as giant particle explosions called coronal mass ejections, about the size of 15 Earths is currently facing Earth.

Star of our solar system 3D illustration close shot. Nebula gases erupting from the Sun's surface. Solar hot energy flares and coronal mass ejections unleash a torrent of searing hot gases into space.
 A solar flare is a burst of radiation, or light, from the sun (Picture: Getty Images)

One coronal mass ejection earlier this week even risked forcing Nasa to postpone Artemis II – again.

Dr Clewer says: ‘Space weather scientists are constantly monitoring the Sun, and the Artemis missions have a whole team just for this purpose, ready to advise what to do.

‘In the longer term of human spaceflight, space weather and solar radiation are the biggest danger to humans travelling to Mars.’

Everything you need to know about Artemis II

This NASA handout photo shows guests watching the Artemis II crewed lunar mission lift off from Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on April 1, 2026. Four astronauts blasted off aboard a massive NASA rocket April 1 on a long-anticipated journey around the Moon, the first crewed lunar flyby in more than 50 years. With an intense roar that reverberated far beyond the launchpad, the enormous orange-and-white rocket carried three Americans and one Canadian away from Florida's Kennedy Space Center at approximately 6:35 pm local time, according to an AFP journalist onsite. "We're going to the Moon!" yelled a spectator. (Photo by Bill INGALLS / NASA / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / NASA / Bill INGALLS" - HANDOUT - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
This is the first crewed lunar flyby in more than 50 years (Picture: NASA/Bill Ingalls)

What is the point of Artemis II?

Mainly to test out the Orion’s life-support systems as well as its ability to try to execute docking manoeuvres for future flights.

If it goes without a hitch, Artemis III will happen in 2028 and see people actually step onto the lunar surface.

How fast does Artemis II travel?

About 17,000mph – at that speed, you could go from east to west London in about seven seconds.

How long will it take for Artemis II to reach the moon?

April 6 will be when the crew will reach our lunar neighbour and be the first pair of human eyes to see parts of the far side of the moon.

The Orion will then swing back to Earth using the moon’s gravity, splashing down on April 10, ending the 10-day mission

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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