
Successful Conclusion to NASA's Commercial Crew Mission
NASA's SpaceX Crew-10 mission safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off California at 11:33 a.m. EDT on August 9, 2025, completing the agency's tenth commercial crew rotation mission. Astronauts Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, Takuya Onishi (JAXA), and Kirill Peskov (Roscosmos) returned aboard SpaceX's Dragon Endurance spacecraft after seven months aboard the International Space Station.
Mission Highlights and Scientific Contributions
The Crew-10 mission launched March 14, 2025, from Kennedy Space Center, docking with the ISS 29 hours later. During their 2,368 Earth orbits covering 62.8 million miles, crew members conducted vital research including plant growth studies in microgravity, DNA sequencing experiments on space radiation effects, and cellular analysis of ocular changes. McClain and Ayers performed a critical spacewalk on May 1 to relocate communications equipment and install solar array mounting hardware.
Advancing Future Space Exploration
This mission demonstrated NASA's Commercial Crew Program capabilities for reliable space transportation. Acting Administrator Sean Duffy emphasized these missions enable long-duration exploration and support future lunar and Martian expeditions. Crew-10's return clears the way for Crew-11's ongoing research aboard the ISS, continuing NASA's partnership with private industry for sustainable space operations.