International Space Station undergoes crew handover, change of command
Date:
Wed, 13 Aug 2025 14:07:08 +0000
Description:
Expedition 73 aboard the International Space Station (ISS) continues to  perform its scheduled science and The post International Space Station  undergoes crew handover, change of command appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Expedition 73 aboard the International Space Station (ISS) continues to  perform its scheduled science and maintenance activities on humanitys premier  orbiting outpost, now more than a quarter-century old. The Station has a new  commander and a new set of crew members on the U.S. side of the complex, as  four astronauts departed this week to conclude their tour of duty on board  ISS. 
The Crew-11 mission successfully launched on Friday, Aug. 1, at 11:43 AM EDT  (15:43 UTC) and docked just over 14 hours later on Saturday, Aug. 2, at 06:26  UTC. Crew Dragon Endeavour set a new record for the shortest time from launch  to docking; previous Crew Dragon missions to ISS typically took around 19  hours to dock with the Station after launch. 
After Endeavour docked to the zenith port on the Stations Harmony node 
module, the ISS temporarily hosted 11 crew members. Crew-11s astronauts  settled into life aboard the orbiting outpost while also being assisted by  Crew-10s members, who were handing the baton to Crew-11s Zena Cardman, 
Michael Fincke, Kimiya Yui, and Oleg Platonov. Sergey Ryzhikov (L) and Takuya  Onishi (R) shaking hands during the ISS change of command ceremony. (Credit:  NASA) 
During the joint operations period, Station commander Takuya Onishi handed 
off his command responsibility to Roscosmos Sergey Ryzhikov. Ryzhikov will  command ISS and the Expedition 73 crew until December, when he and his Soyuz  MS-27 crewmates leave the Station and return to Earth, while Onishi returns 
to Earth after becoming the third Japanese to command ISS. 
Crew-10s Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, Takuya Onishi, and Kirill Peskov 
boarded Crew Dragon Endurance and undocked from the Station on Friday, Aug. 8  at 22:15 UTC before splashing down off the southern California coast on  Saturday, Aug. 9 at 8:33 AM PDT (15:33 UTC). They returned to Earth with  critical science samples aboard the Polar mobile cold storage locker. 
During their stay on ISS, Crew-10s astronauts worked on many experiments,  including studies on physical and mental change in astronauts during  spaceflight and blood flow from the brain to the heart in microgravity. ISS  crews stay on the Station for up to six months or so at a time, enabling a  large database of how astronauts adapt to spaceflight. Takuya Onishi in the  Kibo module with the JEM Internal Ball Camera 2. (Credit: NASA) 
Their science program also included studies on future lunar navigation  techniques, various plant and seed experiments, investigations into how cells  sense gravity, crystallization research, and tests on robots that could free  astronauts from performing certain tasks, among other projects. 
Crew-11 also has an extensive science program to look forward to. Highlights  of Crew-11s science program include a study on producing stem cells in  microgravity, work on a potential alternative to antibiotics, an experiment 
to produce nutrients that can remain viable for years in the space  environment, and a Japanese plant cell division experiment using tobacco 
cells and green algae. 
Crew-11s astronauts also may be tasked with a spacewalk on the U.S. segment  that Crew-10 did not do. Crew-10 astronauts McClain and Ayers conducted  EVA-93. On May 1, they worked on installing a modification kit for new solar  arrays as well as an antenna relocation. The modification kit installation 
was not completed and was set aside for the next spacewalk, EVA-94. Astronaut  Anne McClain during EVA-93. (Credit: NASA) 
However, EVA-94 has not yet been conducted, and will be left for a future  crew, very possibly for the Crew-11 astronauts. Whenever this spacewalk takes  place, the astronauts will be tasked with completing the solar array  medication kit installation on the P4 truss at the 2A location, as well as  several other tasks. 
Besides the change of command, the crew handover, and the return of Crew-10 
to Earth that have already happened, the CRS-33 cargo resupply mission is 
also scheduled for this month. CRS-33, using Cargo Dragon C211 on its third  flight, is currently set to launch on Thursday, Aug. 21, at 3:57 AM EDT 
(07:57 UTC) from Space Launch Complex-40 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force  Station. 
Other cargo missions to the Station are only a little bit further down the  line. Progress MS-32 is scheduled to fly from Site 31/6 at Baikonur 
Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Sept. 11 at 13:49 UTC, while the NG-23 Cygnus  cargo mission is set to fly on a Falcon 9 from Florida no earlier than this  September. The NG-22 mission was supposed to fly earlier this year but was  canceled after the Cygnus spacecraft suffered an accident during transport to  Florida. Cutaway illustration of the HTV-X. (Credit: JAXA) 
Japans HTV-X is scheduled to make its first flight to ISS no earlier than 
this October. The HTV-X is a follow-on spacecraft to the earlier Kounotori  vehicle, which helped supply the Station from 2009 to 2020, and will be able  to carry pressurized and unpressurized cargo to ISS like Kounotori did. Like  Kounotori, HTV-X is disposed of with a destructive reentry in Earths  atmosphere. 
HTV-X was designed to reduce mass and costs while increasing the amount of  payload it could carry to the Station. The spacecraft will also be able to  generate more power than Kounotori and will support late cargo loading. HTV-X  will be launched by the H3-24L variant with four strap-on solid rocket  boosters, and it will be berthed to the Station using its Canadian-built  robotic arm. 
Another new cargo spacecraft, Sierra Spaces DreamChaser Tenacity , was  supposed to fly to the Station, but Tenacity is still in work and may not fly  this year. When the DreamChaser becomes operational, it will add an intact  down mass cargo capability that currently only Cargo Dragon offers. Axiom  Spaces Payload, Power, and Thermal Module shell at Thales Alenia. (Credit:  Axiom Space) 
The current Expedition 73 post Crew-10 complement, with the Crew-11  astronauts, along with Soyuz MS-27s Ryzhikov, Alexey Zubritsky, and NASAs  Jonny Kim, will be working on their scientific and maintenance tasks while  also assisting with cargo loading and unloading from the upcoming visiting  vehicles. 
While Expedition 73 continues, decisions are being made on the ground about  the coming budget for the Station as well as construction on its possible  successors. VASTs Haven Demo, designed to test key systems aboard its coming  space station, is scheduled to fly later this year, while Thales Alenia in  Europe has completed the shell of Axiom Spaces first space station module. 
 (Lead image: Inside the ISS Cupola. Credit: NASA)) 
 
The post International Space Station undergoes crew handover, change of  command appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/08/iss-crew-handover-command/
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