A historic journey took flight on Monday night as a bitcoin investor and three seasoned polar explorers embarked on the first-ever crewed space mission to traverse both the North and South Poles. This unprecedented adventure, facilitated by SpaceX, promises breathtaking views of Earth’s polar extremes from orbit.

A Pioneering Path Through Space

Chun Wang, a Chinese-born entrepreneur now residing in Malta, spearheaded this groundbreaking mission. Liftoff occurred at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, with SpaceX’s Falcon rocket charting a southward course over the Atlantic, setting the crew on a trajectory that had never been attempted in over six decades of human space exploration.

While Wang has remained tight-lipped about the cost of this exclusive spaceflight, the experience itself is priceless. His capsule, fully automated and programmed for a 3.5-day mission, will complete one full orbit of Earth approximately every 90 minutes, including a 46-minute stretch directly over the poles.

“Enjoy the views of the poles. Send us some pictures,” SpaceX Launch Control radioed shortly after the capsule reached orbit.

A Team of Adventurers in Space

Joining Wang on this mission are Norwegian filmmaker Jannicke Mikkelsen, German robotics researcher Rabea Rogge, and Australian polar guide Eric Philips. Mikkelsen, the first Norwegian astronaut, has flown over the poles before but never at this altitude. She previously participated in a record-setting 2019 expedition that circled the globe via the poles in a Gulfstream jet to mark the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

This space mission, named Fram2 in homage to the historic Norwegian polar research vessel, will feature over two dozen scientific experiments, including the first-ever human X-rays taken in space. The crew also packed an array of high-resolution cameras to document their celestial adventure.

A Flight with Scientific and Environmental Significance

Until now, no astronaut had ventured beyond 65 degrees north and south latitude, a boundary last approached by Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova in 1963. While polar orbits are commonly used for Earth observation and climate monitoring satellites, this mission marks a new chapter in human spaceflight.

Geir Klover, director of Oslo’s Fram Museum, hopes the mission will shed light on climate change and the rapid melting of polar ice caps. To bridge past and present exploration, the crew brought a fragment of the original Fram ship, signed by early 20th-century polar pioneer Oscar Wisting.

Wang, who proposed this polar orbit mission to SpaceX in 2023, has long been a travel enthusiast, having flown in planes, helicopters, and hot air balloons across more than half the countries on Earth. He strategically timed this SpaceX journey to coincide with his 1,000th flight.

Embracing the challenges of space travel, Wang expressed excitement about the increasing accessibility of orbital adventures. “Spaceflight is becoming increasingly routine and, honestly, I’m happy to see that,” he said via X last week.

As space tourism evolves, this landmark journey underscores how human curiosity and innovation continue to push the boundaries of exploration—this time, from pole to pole, beyond the limits of what was once thought possible.