The Astra rocket explosion on March 14, 2026, was caused by a catastrophic propellant leak in the second-stage oxidizer tank, according to preliminary findings released by the FAA on April 2, 2026. The leak occurred 187 seconds into flight at an altitude of 68 kilometers, resulting in a hypergolic fuel mixture that ignited and destroyed the vehicle.
What Specific Component Failed in the Astra Rocket?
The failure originated in a titanium weld joint connecting the liquid oxygen feed line to the upper stage tank. Metallurgical analysis identified a 3.2mm crack that propagated due to vibration stress during Max-Q transition. Astra’s engineering team confirmed the weld passed pre-flight pressure tests at 450 psi but failed under dynamic flight loads exceeding 520 psi—a 15% margin violation that went undetected.
How Does This Compare to Previous Astra Failures?
This marks Astra’s third launch failure in 12 attempts since 2024. Unlike the June 2025 guidance system malfunction, this incident represents a fundamental design flaw rather than software error. The propellant leak scenario mirrors SpaceX’s 2016 Amos-6 anomaly, though Astra’s failure occurred in-flight rather than during fueling operations. Industry analysts note the company’s rapid iteration approach may prioritize speed over redundant safety verification.
What Changes Will Astra Implement?
Astra announced a voluntary flight suspension until Q3 2026. The company will redesign all propellant feed systems with reinforced Inconel 718 alloy welds and implement real-time pressure monitoring sensors across 47 critical junction points.