NASA delays Artemis mission to moon because of extreme cold at the launch site

Bill Nye on Artemis II mission, NASA's monumental projects in space

NASA has delayed astronauts' upcoming trip to the moon because of near-freezing temperatures expected at the launch site.

The first Artemis moonshot with a crew is now targeted for no earlier than Feb. 8, two days later than planned.

NASA was all set to conduct a fueling test of the 322-foot moon rocket on Saturday, but called everything off late Thursday because of the expected cold.

The critical dress rehearsal is now set for Monday, weather permitting. The change leaves NASA with only three days in February to send four astronauts around the moon and back, before slipping into March.

"Any additional delays would result in a day for day change," NASA said in a statement Friday.

Heaters are keeping the Orion capsule warm atop the rocket, officials said, and rocket-purging systems are also being adapted to the cold.

Commander Reid Wiseman and his crew remain in quarantine in Houston and their arrival at Kennedy Space Center in Florida is uncertain.

This photo provided by NASA shows the Artemis II SLS (Space Launch System) rocket with the Orion spacecraft atop a mobile launcher at Launch Complex 39B, Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.  Jim Ross / AP

Lisa Voiles, chief training officer, told CBS News that her team draft countless ways something could go wrong during any phase of the mission.

The scenarios vary, but Voiles told "CBS Mornings" that it could be anything from the smallest sensor failure all the way up to a fire or other emergency. " She observes how the crew responds to each problem while inside the capsule.

Judd Frieling, one of NASA's flight directors who has supported more than 20 shuttle missions, will be sitting in the hot seat to oversee the Artemis II crew's ascent to space.

Frieling said some of the scenarios thrown at the astronauts and flight controllers during training are "very creative" — and absolutely necessary. 

"If you don't have a completely nailed down plan, at least you have a straw man of what the plan might be," he told "CBS Mornings."

NASA has only a handful of days any given month to launch its first lunar crew in more than half a century. Apollo 17 closed out that storied moon exploration program in 1972.

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