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Crew-10’s Homecoming: From Orbital Lab to Local Shores—A New Chapter in Commercial Spaceflight

spacex s crew 10 undocks after 146 days aboards iss watch credit image nasa tv via space.com

spaceX’s Crew-10 undocks after 146 days aboard ISS. Watch their splashdown off California—first-ever west coast commercial return. Read the full human story.

A Milestone Return—Commercial Flight Meets Coastal Shores

Today, August 9, 2025, marks a historical moment: SpaceX’s Crew-10 completes its journey back to Earth—splashing down off the California coast at 11:33 a.m

Crew-10’s Journey: Pioneering Sustainable Space Science & Global Cooperationaslo read

. EDT (8:33 a.m. local time). After nearly five months (146 days) aboard the International Space Station (ISS), this mission isn’t just a return—it’s the first Commercial Crew splashdown from the U.S. West Coast, showcasing how commercial spaceflight is becoming more local, immediate, and spectator-friendly

EventTime (EDT)What Happened
Live Stream Starts10:15 a.m. EDTBroadcast begins via NASA and space.com (Space)
Splashdown11:33 a.m. EDTCrew-10’s Dragon capsule lands safely in the Pacific off CA (Space, NASA)
Press Briefing~1:00 p.m. EDTPost-landing press conference airs (Space)

Beyond the Headlines—Experience and Legacy


Crew-10, consisting of NASA astronauts Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers, JAXA’s Takuya Onishi, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Kirill Peskov, aren’t just returning—they’re bringing back a legacy of more than 200 critical experiments conducted in microgravity environment aboard ISS

. From plant biology to human cell behavior, their work contributes directly to life-support systems for future deep-space missions.

AstronautAgencyRole & Contribution
Anne McClainNASACommander; led research and crew operations
Nichole AyersNASAPilot; supported critical facility upgrades
Takuya OnishiJAXA (Japan)Specialist; led international science efforts
Kirill PeskovRoscosmos (Russia)Cosmonaut; performed joint experiments

A View From the Shore—What Makes This Splashdown Special


Public Engagement: It brings real-time space excitement closer to home—literally.

Accessibility: Families in California could actually watch this live, unlike previous splashdowns in the Atlantic or Gulf

Commercial Maturity: The ability to land off the West Coast shows how adaptable and confident commercial human spaceflight has become.

Science, Spectacle & Sustainability

ElementWhy It Matters
West Coast SplashdownMakes future splashdowns accessible, reduces transit time
Media AccessReal-time livestreaming boosts public and educational outreach
Commercial InfrastructureDemonstrates Roadmap for localized, sustainable space missions

Wrapping Up


Crew-10’s homecoming isn’t just a return—it’s a statement piece for the age of commercial spaceflight. Through local access, international collaboration, and scientific innovation, it sets a new benchmark for how we experience space missions. AB is not just engineering, but a human story landing on our shores.

The Future of Starbase and Its Growing Infrastructure

Starbase is not just a launch site anymore. It is turning into a hub of new technology and big dreams. Roads, power supply, and water systems are expanding

to meet the needs of future missions. The place is slowly becoming a self-sustaining spaceport. This growth will help speed up rocket building and testing.

It will also attract skilled people from around the world to work and live near the site.

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