On Friday, April 4, 2025, a private space mission ended successfully with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean near Southern California. The mission was funded by Bitcoin investor Chun Wang and became the first human spaceflight to orbit over both the North and South Poles. The crew launched from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on Monday, March 31, 2025, and spent about three and a half days in space aboard SpaceX’s Dragon capsule.

The mission, called Fram2, was named after a famous polar exploration ship from the early 1900s. It carried four people: a robotics expert from Germany, a polar guide from Australia, a filmmaker from Norway, and Wang, a Chinese-born entrepreneur living in Malta. The capsule had a domed window that gave the crew amazing views of Earth’s polar regions. During the mission, the crew conducted 25 scientific experiments, including the first medical X-rays taken in space. Although they experienced motion sickness early on, they felt better by the second day. Their time in space helped scientists learn more about how humans adjust to space travel and return to Earth. SpaceX chose the Pacific Ocean for landing to avoid debris risks near Florida. This historic flight showed how private missions can push boundaries and may help make space travel more common in the future.