Polaris DawnAstronauts Successfully Leave SpaceX Capsule for Historic All-Civilian Spacewalk

Mar. 15, 2025

For the first time in history, civilian astronauts have successfully completed a spacewalk.

While only two of the four members of the crew physically left the SpaceX capsule — engineer Sarah Gillis, 30, andJared Isaacman, the 41-year-old billionaire tech entrepreneur who is funding the flight — pilot Scott “Kidd” Poteet, 50, and medical officer Anna Menon, 38, were also suited up and exposed to the vacuum of space.

Sarah Gillis.Polaris Program/AFP via Getty

This handout picture courtesy of SpaceX and Polaris taken on September 12, 2024, shows US SpaceX engineer Sarah Gillis, egressing the Dragon spacecraft, during the first private spacewalk performed by the crew of the SpaceX Polaris Dawn mission.

Polaris Program/AFP via Getty

That’s because the spaceship does not have an airlock, so the capsule had to be opened and depressurized for all. To avoid decompression sickness, the crew had their nitrogen removed from their blood in a process pre-takeoff.

The spacewalk was one of the key goals ofPolaris Dawn’s mission. While standing in the hatch and looking down at Earth, Isaacman got reflective.

“Back at home, we all have a lot of work to do, but from here, it sure looks like a perfect world,” Isaacman said.

Sarah Gillis during the first-ever commercial spacewalk, with the Polaris Dawn mission.SpaceX

Sarah Gillis during first commercial spacewalk

SpaceX

Thefour members of thePolaris Dawntook off in a SpaceX Dragon capsule from Florida early on Tuesday, Sept. 10.

Their goal? Tofly deeper into the cosmos(870 miles, to be exact) than any other since theGemini 11took off in 1966.

“This is a stepping stone,” Menon, a NASA veteran, told PEOPLE earlier this year as she and the other astronauts prepared for takeoff. “It’s helping to build technologies that will get humans closer to Mars and beyond.”

“We hope to inspire future generations,” Gillis added.

The crew of the SpaceX Polaris Dawn mission.Getty

The Crew of the next SpaceX private astronaut flight called Polaris Dawn, (Left to Right) Anna Menon, who works to develop astronaut operations for SpaceX

Getty

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Overtheir five-day journey, in addition to their spacewalk, the team is planning dozens of studies and experiments while in orbit to help understand the effects of spaceflight and radiation on humans.

Menon also read her children’s book,Kisses from Space, to a group of kids back on Earth via zoom, including her own and a few young cancer patients. Proceeds from the book raise money for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

source: people.com