The Artemis II crew entered quarantine on March 18, the rocket is at Pad 39B, but the launch date has quietly slipped from April 1 to 'no later than April 8.'
NASA's Kennedy Space Center confirmed crew quarantine began March 18, while SpaceNews notes the SLS has been at Pad 39B since March 20 with no formal delay announcement.
Space X accounts are tracking the quiet date slip from April 1 to NLT April 8 — the gap between NASA's events page and its official statements is becoming a story itself.
Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen entered pre-launch quarantine on March 18 at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The Space Launch System rocket has been standing at Pad 39B since March 20. Everything is positioned for launch. The date is the question. [1]
NASA's original target was April 1. The agency's events page now shows "no later than April 8." No formal announcement of a delay has been made. The 14-day quarantine period — standard health stabilization protocol — would align with either date, giving NASA flexibility without commitment. [2]
Artemis II will send four astronauts around the Moon and back, the first crewed lunar mission since Apollo 17 in 1972. The program's trajectory has narrowed since its inception. The Gateway space station was cancelled. A direct lunar surface base was chosen instead. This flight is the validation step — proving the Orion capsule and SLS can keep humans alive beyond low Earth orbit.
The crew is isolated. The rocket is fueled. The launch window is open. What remains is whatever NASA is not yet saying publicly. Every day in quarantine without a firm date is a day the schedule is still being negotiated with the hardware.
-- Kenji Nakamura, Tokyo