Superstitions usually don’t fly in rocket science, but this week, NASA and SpaceX tempted fate in a way that has the internet buzzing. On Friday, February 13, 2026, for the first time in history, a human crew blasted off into orbit on the unluckiest day on the calendar. What happened next wasn’t a horror movie script—it was a textbook definition of a “lucky day” that marks a massive shift in how we view space travel.
The Mission: Crew-12 Defies the Odds
At exactly 5:15 a.m. EST, a Falcon 9 rocket roared off the pad at Cape Canaveral’s Space Launch Complex 40. This wasn’t just any routine taxi ride to the ISS; it was the Crew-12 mission, carrying a diverse quartet of explorers who laughed in the face of bad omens. Leading the charge was Commander Jessica Meir, a veteran NASA astronaut famous for participating in the first all-female spacewalk. Joining her were pilot Jack Hathaway (making his first flight), European Space Agency astronaut Sophie Adenot, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev.
A Perfect Landing
The launch was flawless, but the landing stole the show. Minutes after lifting the crew toward the heavens, the Falcon 9 first-stage booster performed a stunning return, touching down directly at Launch Complex 40. This rare land-based recovery for a crewed mission—rather than the usual drone ship landing at sea—created a sonic boom that woke up half of Florida’s Space Coast, serving as a roaring wake-up call that the era of reusable rockets is fully mature.
“It turns out Friday the 13th is a very lucky day,” the SpaceX launch director joked over the comms as the Dragon spacecraft, named Freedom, separated perfectly from the upper stage.
The Bigger Picture
Beyond the superstition, Crew-12 is critical for the Expedition 74 rotation aboard the International Space Station. The crew will spend the next six months conducting over 200 science experiments, ranging from growing 3D-printed human organs in microgravity to studying how fire behaves in space—research essential for future missions to Mars. By launching on a day historically avoided by sailors and pilots alike, NASA and SpaceX sent a clear message: reliability, engineering, and precision have officially eclipsed luck.







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