‘Houston, we have a problem’: astronauts fix loo aboard Artemis II
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

NASA said the Artemis II crew restored Orion’s toilet to normal operation after reporting a blinking fault light during the first day of the Moon mission
The Artemis II crew can now boldly go…after fixing a problem with Orion’s toilet, NASA has revealed.
Astronauts on the first crewed lunar mission in more than 50 years worked with mission control in Houston to restore the toilet to normal operations following the mission’s proximity operations demonstration.
NASA said the crew reported the blinking fault light within the opening hours of their mission on April 1. Ground teams assessed the data and then worked with the astronauts to troubleshoot and resolve the issue.
The incident came during the first day of the 10-day Artemis II mission, which launched from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday evening and is due to carry four astronauts around the Moon and back.
With the toilet issue resolved, the crew were scheduled to take a four-hour nap before being awakened at 7am EDT on Thursday, April 2, to prepare for the perigee raise burn.

NASA said that burn would lift the lowest point of Orion’s orbit around Earth. Together with the apogee raise burn completed earlier, it will shape the spacecraft’s initial orbit and prepare it for later translunar operations.
The crew were then expected to resume their sleep period at about 9.40am.
READ MORE: ‘Artemis II lifts off for Moon mission – here is what the astronauts will be doing day by day‘. From spacesuit drills and radiation shelter tests to a close pass of the lunar far side, NASA’s Artemis II crew face a packed 10-day schedule after the first crewed launch towards the Moon in more than 50 years.
Do you have news to share or expertise to contribute? The European welcomes insights from business leaders and sector specialists. Get in touch with our editorial team to find out more.
Main image: The Artemis II crew – Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen – during training at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center ahead of the first crewed mission around the Moon in more than 50 years. Credit: NASA
TOP STORIES
-
Could these animals replace Churchill, Austen, Turner and Turing on Britain’s banknotes? -
Universal’s £5bn Bedfordshire theme park will become 'UK's most popular tourist attraction' -
Holiday hotspots fight back as tourist numbers surge -
Costa Rica’s US$10bn medtech boom defies global investment chill -
Could this mile-long floating city become the world’s most extreme property market? -
WATCH: this tiny plane could let passengers fly from rooftops instead of airports -
‘Shadow AI’ poses growing boardroom cyber risk as staff feed company data into chatbots -
UK net zero economy worth £105bn and supports 1.1m jobs -
BOC Macau strengthens role as China finance bridge after six award wins -
Top British chefs warn restaurants are fighting for survival as closures hit three-a-day -
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
Felled Sycamore Gap tree ‘to speak again’ in UK national memorial -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
BrewDog founder pours free shares into new beer firm -
Inside gaming billionaire Gabe Newell’s next-level gigayacht -
Machiavell-AI? Autonomous artificial intelligence systems ‘could become dangerously manipulative’, experts warn -
Prague targets high-value business travellers after global congress ranking boost -
eBay rejects GameStop bid -
AI EVERYTHING KENYA X GITEX KENYA summit launches in Nairobi as East Africa accelerates AI ambitions -
Xpeng eyes European factory as VW seeks to offload spare capacity -
This hidden Greek beach has just been named the best in Europe -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
New routes put Europe’s rail revival back on track -
Parked electric cars could help power island ferries in German trial


























