NASA's new administrator, Jared Isaacman, has voiced complete trust in the Orion spacecraft's heat shield ahead of the Artemis II mission. Following a detailed review with experts, he affirmed the agency's plan to proceed with the existing shield after addressing concerns from the Artemis I flight. This decision comes just weeks before the crewed lunar mission's potential launch in early February 2026.
Jared Isaacman, sworn in as NASA administrator on December 18, 2025, prioritized the Orion heat shield review amid preparations for Artemis II, slated for launch in as few as four weeks from January 9, 2026. During Artemis I in November 2022, the spacecraft's heat shield suffered unexpected damage, with chunks of ablative Avcoat material detaching during reentry. This issue, involving 186 blocks designed to withstand up to 5,000°F (2,760°C), was not publicly disclosed for nearly 18 months until a NASA Inspector General report revealed close-up images of char loss.
An independent review team, formed in April 2024 and concluding in December 2024, assessed the damage and recommended flying Artemis II with the current shield, though a redacted report fueled criticism over transparency. Isaacman, a billionaire entrepreneur and private astronaut, convened a half-day meeting at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC, inviting senior officials, engineers like Luis Saucedo and Howard Hu, and outside experts including former astronauts Charles Camarda and Danny Olivas. Two reporters observed the session to promote openness.
Engineers presented new data showing trapped gases in the impermeable Avcoat caused cracking during Artemis I's 14-minute heat exposure phase. For Artemis II, NASA will adjust the reentry profile to a steeper angle, shortening this to eight minutes and reducing damage risks, as validated by arc jet tests and modeling. A "what if we’re wrong" analysis confirmed that even if large shield sections failed, Orion's underlying composite base—limited to 500°F but only reaching 160°F in Artemis I—would protect the crew of Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen, allowing a safe splashdown.
Isaacman stated, “We have full confidence in the Orion spacecraft and its heat shield, grounded in rigorous analysis and the work of exceptional engineers who followed the data throughout the process.” Olivas, initially hesitant, now supports the plan and would fly on Orion. Camarda remains cautious, urging more NASA research, but acknowledged the briefing's value. Officials considered alternatives like swapping with the permeable Avcoat shield for Artemis III but deemed modifications too complex, prioritizing the mission's free-return trajectory. The astronauts, once skeptical, are now eager to proceed.