بتوقيت بيروت - 1/11/2026 3:01:10 AM - GMT (+2 )

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The landing livestreams will begin early Jan. 15 at 2:15 a.m. EST (0615 GMT), with splashdown set for 3:40 a.m. EST (0740 GMT).
This will be our last update of the day, barring any new update from NASA. We’ll be back on Sunday to more on the packing and other preparations of the crew ahead of their unplanned departure from the ISS.
Thanks for tuning in.
Tariq Malik
Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui is saying some farewells to the Japan-built section of the International Space Station as he and his Crew-11 crewmates prepare for their medical evacuation from the orbiting lab on Jan. 14.
Yui shared a photo on Friday that he took from a window on the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Kibo module, the largest science laboratory on the space station, showing the module’s airlock and experiment platform. The space station’s main truss and two giant solar arrays can be seen, as well as the blue arc of the Earth below.
“Today was a very busy day as well, so I was working quite late.,” Yui wrote. “I hadn’t taken the photos to introduce to everyone, so I just shot them from the window of ‘Kibo’ a little while ago. Since I’ll soon have to bid farewell to this view as well, I want to burn it firmly into my eyes, and even more so, into my heart.”
Yui is on his second trip to the ISS with the Crew-11 mission. He’s been taking spectacular photos of Earth and space from the station, as well as videos like the one here shared by Space.com writer Anthony Wood:
Astronaut on ISS captures spectacular orbital video of zodiacal light, auroras and the Pleiades
Yui will return to Earh on Jan. 15 in the wee hours of the morning with Crew-11 crewmates Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman (both of NASA) and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platanov, with their SpaceX Dragon capsule splashing down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California.
Tariq Malik
Tariq Malik
- 3 p.m. – Hatch closure coverage begins on NASA TV and streaming platforms
- 3:30 p.m. – SpaceX Dragon hatch and ISS hatch closed for undocking
- There will be a break here between hatch closure coverage and undocking views.
- 4:45 p.m. – Undocking coverage begins
- 5 p.m. – Undocking and initial ISS departure
- There will be a break here in coverage between undocking and landing.
- 2:15 a.m – Landing coverage begins on NASA TV and streaming platforms
- 2:50 a.m. – Dragon Deorbit burn
- 3:40 a.m. – Splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off California coast
- 5:45 a.m. – Post-landing return to Earth press conference
This current timeline could change as NASA and SpaceX monitor weather at the splashdown site.
“Mission managers continue monitoring conditions in the recovery area, as undocking of the SpaceX Dragon depends on spacecraft readiness, recovery team readiness, weather, sea states, and other factors,” NASA wrote in an update. “NASA and SpaceX will select a specific splashdown time and location closer to the Crew-11 spacecraft undocking.”
Tariq Malik
SpaceX says it’s Dragon spacecraft at the International Space Station is ready to return its four Crew-11 astronauts home in an unprecedented medical evacuation on Jan. 14 and 15.
“Dragon and Crew-11 are targeted t undock from the space station no earlier than Wednesday, January 14,” SpaceX wrote in a mission update on X late yesterday.
Dragon and Crew-11 are targeted to undock from the space station no earlier than Wednesday, January 14 https://t.co/L6ThXkTHbaJanuary 10, 2026
The SpaceX statement came on the heels of NASA’s announcement that the Crew-11 astronauts were scheduled to undock from the space station on Jan. 14 and splashdown off the coast of California early on Jan. 15.
Splashdown is now set for 3:40 a.m. EST (0740 GMT) on Thursday, Jan. 15, NASA officials said.
The Crew-11 Dragon spacecraft will return NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke to Earth alongside Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platanov.
NASA decided to evacuate the crew, which make up four of the seven astronauts currently aboard the International Space Station, on Jan. 8 after an apparently serious medical concern arose with one of the four Crew-11 astronauts. The astronaut is stable, but NASA officials opted for a “controlled medical evacuation” in order to provide astronaut better treatment on the ground, NASA chief Jared Isaacman has said.
Tariq Malik
NASA is targeting no earlier than 5 p.m. EST (2200 GMT) on Jan. 14 for the early departure of the Crew-11 astronauts after an undisclosed medical incident aboard the International Space Station.
The crew will deorbit aboard Endeavour, with splashdown expected early Jan. 15, off the coast of California, “depending on weather and recovery conditions,” according to a post from the space station’s account on X.
.@NASA and @SpaceX target undocking Crew-11 from the International Space Station no earlier than 5pm ET on Jan. 14, with splashdown off California targeted for early Jan. 15 depending on weather and recovery conditions. https://t.co/Y89iIj3jEYJanuary 10, 2026
Josh Dinner
Tariq Malik
The Dragon pressure suits are the same black and white SpaceX spacesuits worn by Crew-11 astronauts Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman, Kimiya Yui and Oleg Platanov during their launch in August 2025. Cardman will command the Dragon flight home with Fincke as pilot. Kimuya and Platanov will serve as mission specialists.
The astronauts have also begun packing for their trip home.
“The foursome began collecting their personal items and packing them for stowage aboard the spacecraft,” NASA wrote in the update.
Cardman spent time today flushing water from and powerfing down two NASA spacesuits on the ISS. She and Fincke were supposed to use the suits during a spacewalk on Jan. 8 and another one next week. Both spacewalks werte canceled due to the medical issue with one of the Crew-11 astronauts.
Yui and Platanov spent time on final science experiments of their mission, including one by Platanov studying how the inner lining of blood vessels work to keep blood flowing in space, in order to avoid the formation of blood clots.
Tariq Malik
You can read our look back at medical issues in space here by Josh Dinner.
The months-long missions on the ISS can have lasting effects on the human body, forcing astronauts to readapt to live on Earth when they return, including rebuilding the muscle mass and bone density lost in space. At least one astronaut suffered a blood clot in orbit due to deep vein thrombisis at the two-month mark of a planned six-month mission. Physicians on Earth were able to devise a treatment for the astronaut to implement in space to address the issue and complete the mission’s full duration.
While NASA’s current astronaut medical issue on the International Space Station has led to the first-ever planned medical evacuation of a crew from the orbiting lab, it is far from the first time the space agency has had to deal with a medical concern in orbit.
Dr. James Polk, NASA’s chief medical officer, told reporters late Thursday that medical issues we find common on Earth – like a toothache or other mild malady – are the same sort of things that have historically occurred with astronauts. The specific nature of the current issue, and the astronaut who experienced it, are being withheld for privacy reasons, he added.
Still, there is a record of medical concerns on the ISS, including ones that led to delays for spacewalks or other tasks.
In August 2020, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei and his crewmate Akhiko Hoshide had their planned spacewalk called off days before the event due to a minor medical issue that remained undisclosed. And in 2008, European Space Agency astronaut Hans Schlegel was replaced on his ISS spacwalk by NASA astronaut Stanley Love due to a medical concern.
Here’s a look at those astronaut medical issues and others from the history of human spaceflight by our writer Josh Dinner.
Tariq Malik
Former Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield posted his thoughts regarding NASA’s recent decision to fly Crew-11 astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) back to Earth due to an ongoing medical issue.
“Big decision by NASA leadership, with multiple domino impacts on operations, but I’m glad to see, as always, crew health and safety come first,” Hadfield wrote on X.
Normally, NASA overlaps incoming and outgoing crews aboard the ISS, but with the possibility of evacuating Crew-11 before Crew-12’s arrival, Hadfield voiced confidence. “The Station will be more vulnerable until the replacement crew of 4 can launch, but we have deep experience running the place with just 3 astronauts for a while,” he wrote.
Former NASA astronaut Ed Lu also weighed in on X. “The afflicted space station astronaut … is almost certainly feeling they have let down the crew. We were trained to get the mission done. But I do trust NASA to do the right thing here.”
It’s still unclear when exactly Crew-11 will depart the station, or when and if NASA will determine an earlier launch date for Crew-12.
For the first time in the 25-year history of the International Space Station, we’ve had a serious enough medical emergency in space to bring a crew home early. Big decision by @nasa leadership, with multiple domino impacts on operations, but I’m glad to see, as always, crew… pic.twitter.com/p3ObJh497DJanuary 8, 2026
Josh Dinner
NASA’s plan to rturn the four Crew-11 astronauts home early from the International Space Station and accelerate the launch of their replacement team, Crew-12, from Florida should not impact the agency’s plans to also launch another crew of astronauts to the moon in February.
NASA chief Jared Isaacman said Thursday that NASA’s Artemis 2 mission, which will launch four astronauts around the moon, will remain on track to launch in early February. The mission will lift off from the Kennedy Space Center, where SpaceX will also launch the Crew-12 astronauts. The Crew-11 astronauts will also have to splashdown off the Florida coast before then.
“These would be totally separate campaigns at this point,” Isaacman said during a Jan. 8 press conference to provide an update on NASA’s decision to end Crew-11 early. “There’s no reason to believe at this point in time that there’d be any overlap that we have to deconflict for.”
You can read the full story here by Staff Writer Josh Dinner.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced his decision to bring the Crew-11 astronauts home early on their SpaceX Dragon capsule on Thursday (Jan. 8). The agency is now drawing up plans to both undock the Crew-11 Dragon and splashdown off the Florida coast early, while also accelerating the planned launch of a replacement crew on the SpaceX Crew-12 mission.
The departure of the Crew-11 astronauts will leave NASA astronaut Chris Williams and two cosmonauts, Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikayev, on their own on the ISS. Crew-11 launched to the ISS in August 2025, with Williams and crew launching on a Soyuz rocket in November.
Watch this space for more updates on this developing story.
Tariq Malik
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