At a Glance
- Four astronauts left the International Space Station five weeks early after an in-orbit medical issue
- This marks the first time in 25 years a mission was shortened for medical reasons
- Splashdown is set for 3:41 a.m. ET Thursday off the California coast
- Why it matters: The unprecedented early return leaves only one NASA astronaut aboard the station for upcoming science operations
NASA has ordered an early end to a space station mission, bringing four astronauts home weeks ahead of schedule due to a medical situation that arose in orbit. The crew undocked Wednesday evening and will splash down early Thursday morning.
Crew-11’s Historic Early Departure
The SpaceX Dragon capsule carrying NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platonov separated from the International Space Station at 5:20 p.m. ET Wednesday. Their journey back to Earth will take nearly 11 hours.
This marks the first time in the space station’s quarter-century history that a mission has been cut short because of a medical problem that developed in space. NASA has not identified which crew member experienced the medical issue or provided details about the condition, citing medical privacy rules.
“Endeavour Crew, enjoy the ride home,” SpaceX mission controllers radioed as the capsule pulled away from the orbiting laboratory.
Medical Privacy and Mission Changes
NASA officials have described the situation as stable and emphasized this is not an emergency evacuation. The agency made the decision to bring the crew home after consulting with medical leadership.
“First and foremost, we are all OK,” Fincke wrote on LinkedIn over the weekend. “Everyone on board is stable, safe, and well cared for. This was a deliberate decision to allow the right medical evaluations to happen on the ground, where the full range of diagnostic capability exists. It’s the right call, even if it’s a bit bittersweet.”
The medical issue first came to light last week when NASA canceled a planned spacewalk. Cardman and Fincke had been scheduled to perform upgrades to the station’s exterior. Days later, the agency announced the entire crew would return approximately one month early.
Timeline of Events
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| August 2024 | Crew-11 arrives at International Space Station |
| January 2025 | Medical incident occurs aboard station |
| Last week | NASA cancels planned spacewalk |
| Wednesday 5:20 p.m. ET | Dragon capsule undocks from station |
| Thursday 3:41 a.m. ET | Scheduled splashdown off California coast |
Return Journey Details
The astronauts’ homecoming involves several critical phases:
- A deorbit burn to slow the spacecraft
- Atmospheric re-entry with heat shield protection
- Parachute deployment for controlled descent
- Splashdown in Pacific Ocean waters off California

The Crew-11 team originally arrived at the station in August and had planned to remain until late February. Their early departure means they will land before the next crew rotation mission launches.
Station Operations Going Forward
NASA flight engineer Chris Williams and two Russian cosmonauts will maintain operations aboard the station after Crew-11’s departure. Williams will likely be the sole NASA astronaut managing U.S. science experiments and station operations for several weeks.
The agency is considering accelerating the next crew rotation mission, designated Crew-12, currently scheduled for launch no earlier than February 15. This would reduce the gap between departing and arriving crews.
Leadership Transition in Orbit
Before departing, Fincke participated in a traditional change of command ceremony Monday, transferring leadership responsibilities to cosmonaut Sergey Kud-Sverchkov.
“Sergey, it’s a honor and a pleasure to be a commander, and I cannot imagine being happier than to hand over command to you,” Fincke said during the ceremony.
Reflecting on his time aboard the station and the unexpected early conclusion, Fincke described “interesting times” but highlighted the international cooperation that characterizes space station operations.
“We’re from all over the planet, and we’re working together,” Fincke said. “It’s a great symbol of what human beings can do.”
Decision-Making Process
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman made the final decision to bring Crew-11 home early after extensive consultations with the agency’s leadership and medical team.
“After discussions with chief health and medical officer Dr. JD Polk and leadership across the agency, I’ve come to the decision that it’s in the best interest of our astronauts to return Crew-11 ahead of their planned departure,” Isaacman said Thursday.
The agency has not indicated whether the medical condition might affect future mission planning or crew selection procedures. Officials emphasized that bringing the crew home early provides access to comprehensive medical facilities and diagnostic capabilities available on Earth.
Key Takeaways
- Historic first: No previous space station mission has ended early due to medical issues in orbit
- Crew safety: NASA prioritized astronaut health over mission duration
- Operational impact: Reduced crew complement will affect station science operations
- Future planning: Agency evaluating options to minimize gap between crew rotations
The Crew-11 mission’s early conclusion demonstrates NASA’s commitment to crew safety above mission objectives, even when it means making unprecedented operational changes to long-duration spaceflight missions.

