Contact Us

SpaceX delivers four astronauts to the International Space Station just 15 hours after launch

A SpaceX capsule carrying four astronauts from the U.S., Japan, and Russia docked with the ISS Saturday, temporarily boosting the crew to 11; the team will stay for six months, replacing a group set to return as early as Wednesday.

Published August 02,2025
Subscribe

The four U.S., Russian and Japanese astronauts pulled up in their SpaceX capsule after from NASA's Kennedy Space Center. They will spend at least six months at the orbiting lab, swapping places with colleagues up there since March. SpaceX will bring those four back as early as Wednesday.

Moving in are NASA's Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japan's Kimiya Yui and Russia's Oleg Platonov — each of whom had been originally assigned to . "Hello, space station!" Fincke radioed as soon as the capsule docked high above the South Pacific.

Cardman and another astronaut were pulled from a SpaceX flight last year to make room for NASA's two stuck astronauts, Boeing Starliner test pilots Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, whose space station stay went from one week to more than nine months. Fincke and Yui had been training for the next Starliner mission. But with Starliner grounded by thruster and other problems until 2026, the two switched to SpaceX.

Platonov was bumped from the Soyuz launch lineup a couple of years ago because of an undisclosed illness.

Their arrival temporarily puts the space station population at 11. The astronauts greeting them had cold drinks and hot food waiting for them.

While their taxi flight was speedy by U.S. standards, the Russians hold the record for the fastest trip to the space station — a lightning-fast three hours.