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NASA’s Flight Dynamics Facility Demonstrates Critical Mission Support During JAXA’s H3/HTV-X1 Launch

View from the International Space Station showing a docked spacecraft with extended solar panels and the station's robotic arm against Earth's blue atmosphere and cloud-covered surface below
The new HTV-X1 cargo spacecraft from JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) is pictured in the grips of the Canadarm2 robotic arm after completing its arrival at the International Space Station. The spacecraft launched four days earlier from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan carrying approximately 12,800 pounds of science, supplies, and hardware for the Expedition 73 crew. Credit: NASA

NASA’s Flight Dynamics Facility (FDF) showcased its essential mission support capabilities during JAXA’s inaugural H3/HTV-X1 mission launch on October 25, 2025, successfully navigating multiple technical challenges that arose during the historic flight, including GPS system failures following vehicle separation.

The mission launched from Tanegashima Space Center following weather delays, achieving nominal lift-off with an acceptable trajectory deviation of 15km. However, the failure of both primary and backup GPS systems post-separation prompted immediate intervention from NASA’s Johnson Space Center to provide critical burn modeling support to JAXA operations.

Within three hours, GPS functionality was restored, but delayed data revealed a significant 60km discrepancy from JSC estimates. This development necessitated rapid TDRS pointing adjustments by FDF analysts, who demonstrated their expertise in responding to real-time emergent situations.

The challenges continued with cancelled demonstration burns and a second GPS outage occurring at T+25 hours, which delayed four planned orbital burns. Despite these complications, FDF analysts maintained flexible operations throughout the mission timeline.

Remarkably, while managing these critical H3/HTV-X1 support activities, the FDF team simultaneously conducted coherent mode checkouts and C-band proficiency passes in preparation for Artemis-II readiness objectives, highlighting the facility’s capacity for complex multi-mission operations.

The successful support of JAXA’s inaugural H3/HTV-X1 mission underscores the Flight Dynamics Facility’s vital role in international space cooperation and its ability to adapt quickly to unexpected mission scenarios while maintaining operational excellence across multiple concurrent objectives.

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The Engineering and Technology Directorate at NASA Goddard designs, builds, and develops space flight technology for American leadership in space. The technical workforce brings this expertise to NASA’s portfolio and supports mission partnerships across the whole of government and industry.

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Page Last Updated: Feb 11, 2026

Page Editor: ETD Web Team

Responsible NASA Official: Hector Dietsch

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