Athletic standout excelling elsewhere
Mann commanded SpaceX mission to the International Space Station
Nicole Aunapu Mann is unquestionably among the greatest players in Navy women’s soccer history.
Now her out-of-this-world performances carry new meaning.
In 2013 Aunapu Mann was selected as one of eight members of NASA Astronaut Group 21, achieving a dream set shortly after earning her wings of gold a decade before.
The California native is one of only two four-time, first-team All-Patriot League selections ever produced by the program.
Playing under her maiden name, Nicole Aunapu, also excelled in the classroom, being named a firstteam Academic All-American by the College Sports Information Directors of America in 1997 and 1998. She was twice selected as Patriot League Women’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year.
That drive and determination that made Aunapu Mann such a successful soccer player and midshipman at the Naval Academy has led to a distinguished post-graduate career. She received Marine Corps aviation as a service selection and wound up flying the F/A-18 Hornet.
Aunapu Mann logged more than 2,500 flight hours in 25 types of aircraft and 200 carrier landings, while flying 47 combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. She received two Air Medals, two Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medals and two Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medals in recognition of exemplary service.
She graduated as a member of Class 135 from the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School in July 2008. Col. Aunapu Mann made history in October 2022 when she served as commander of the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft Endurance. She led an international crew of four astronauts that spent nearly six months at the International Space Station.
Aunapu Mann, who is registered with the Wailacki of the Round Valley Indian Tribes, became the first Indigenous woman to launch into orbit. She conducted two spacewalks totaling 14 hours, 2 minutes.
Aunapu Mann’s journey began with a choice to play college soccer at the Naval Academy, inspired to cross the country by coach Carin Gabarra, a former All-American at the University of California, Santa Barbara and United States women’s national team member.
“I was always interested in serving in the military because I wanted to be part of something bigger than myself and serve my
country,” Aunapu Mann said. “I also really enjoyed math and science, so those two elements are why I wound up focusing on the service academies.
“The final piece was Carin Gabarra, who was my idol as a kid. I watched Carin play soccer while growing up and had a poster of her on the wall of my bedroom. When I found out she was the head coach at the Naval Academy, it all came together.”
Aunapu Mann became an immediate starter at marking back as a 5-foot-5 plebe.
“Nicole just had the mentality piece,” Gabarra said. “Your job is to mark one person, and the challenge is to see who is going to win that duel.
“Nicole’s competitiveness and toughness were exceptional. She was a relentless defender who was also very good on the ball and could jump-start the attack after winning possession.”
Aunapu Mann was named Patriot League Defender of the Year as both a junior and senior. She was a fourtime United Soccer Coaches All-East Region selection, earning second-team honors as a senior captain.
Looking back, Aunapu Mann realizes how her time with Navy women’s soccer helped prepare her to become an officer.
“Being a member of the soccer team, you learn so much about peer leadership and working together to overcome challenges,” she said. “You win and lose together. As a young woman, I realized the Marine Corps was my next team.”
From fighter jets to spacecraft
During summer training before her senior year Aunapu Mann was introduced to aviation and the world of fighter jets, which was a transformational experience.
“I didn’t have it all figured out when I went to Annapolis,” she said. “I didn’t know what I wanted to do in the military.
“Fairly early on I knew I wanted to be a Marine. It wasn’t until the summer before my first year that I got a ride in the backseat of an F-18. I remember thinking, ‘You’re telling me I can be a pilot and a Marine? Sign me up and let’s do this.’ ”
After graduating the academy with a degree in mechanical engineering, Aunapu Mann attended graduate school at Stanford and earned a master’s degree in mechanical engineering with a specialization in fluid mechanics.
While stationed at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort in North Carolina, Aunapu Mann deployed twice aboard the USS Enterprise in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.
Shortly thereafter Aunapu Mann realized she missed the engineering element of military service, which led her to apply to the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School.
“It was a way to be a fighter pilot and an engineer — sort of put those two things together,” she said.
While attending the school at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Aunapu Mann had the light bulb moment that has proved life-changing.
“I came across online the biographies of a couple Marine astronauts,” she said. “I was reading their bios and was like, ‘Ah, they flew F-18s and I fly F-18s. They went to test-pilot school and I’m going to test pilot school.’
“It became apparent this was something I could do in the future.”
Aunapu Mann completed her NASA training in 2015. She worked on the development of the Orion spacecraft along with space launch and exploration ground systems.
As commander of the SpaceX Crew-5 mission, Aunapu Mann led an international team that included another Navy pilot, a Japanese astronaut and Russian cosmonaut.
Endurance launched on Oct. 5, 2022, and flew to the International Space Station as part of Expedition 68 with Crew-5 contributing to hundreds of experiments and technology demonstrations.
“It was the most incredible thing I’ve ever done. You spend so much time training for your mission onboard the space station, so when you get up there you are so excited to put all that training to work,” said Aunapu Mann, noting the work involved everything from maintenance such as upgrading the CO2 scrubbers to working with flying robots and training for spacewalks.
Aunapu Mann prepared for her spacewalks inside the NASA Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory by training for six hours at a time underwater in one of the world’s largest pools with weight and foam used to manipulate buoyancy to simulate full or partial gravity.
However, nothing could prepare Aunapu Mann for actually putting on a space suit and venturing outside the station through an airlock. Her assignment was to perform upgrades to the space station’s solar arrays.
“When you go out the door it’s amazing how similar a lot of the training is to doing an actual spacewalk,” she said, “except you don’t have that stability of the water. While you don’t weigh anything in space, you still have a lot of mass and a lot of momentum, so you have to learn how to control that and you have to use a lot of finesse in order to be effective.
“When you’re outside in the vacuum of space it’s just that visor between you and space. As you’re hanging on to the space station by a tether and looking down at planet Earth, it’s absolutely incredible.”
Aunapu Mann is once again stationed at the Johnson Space Center in Houston and is tasked with supporting spacewalks for the International Space Station, performing robotics work and helping with the development of new space suits.
Is a moon landing next?
Aunapu Mann is also playing an integral role in developing the Artemis program, which is intended to reestablish a human presence on the moon for the first time since the Apollo 17 landing in 1972. The program’s stated long-term goal is to establish a permanent base on the moon to facilitate human missions to Mars.
“We’re going back to the moon through the Artemis program, so we’re testing new space suits and new spacecraft, developing landers and creating habitats for the moon. It’s a very exciting time,” said Aunapu Mann, who hopes to join the elite list of astronauts who have stepped on the moon.
Being an astronaut is glamorous, but it’s also dangerous. The Naval Academy has produced more astronauts than any college institution with Aunapu Mann becoming the 54th. Among them is Willie McCool, who was the pilot of the space shuttle Columbia mission that disintegrated upon reentry into the atmosphere, killing the entire crew.
Aunapu Mann acknowledged that her chosen profession “is not without risks” and said astronauts “don’t take that lightly.” She said it’s important to remember all those who made the ultimate sacrifice and for NASA to learn from past mistakes.
“We have to hold those very tight no matter how painful it is because we don’t want to repeat those mistakes and lose another crew member,” Aunapu Mann said. “We do think about it and talk about it quite often. There’s a huge team at NASA that is trying to make space exploration as safe as possible, but at the end of the day you are strapped to a rocket and you are leaving the planet.
“It is dangerous and you have to explain that to your parents, your spouse and your children.”
Aunapu Mann recently received significant recognition as she was among six former student-athletes to receive the NCAA Silver Anniversary Award. It honors former student-athletes for their outstanding athletic and professional achievements in conjunction with the 25th anniversary of the conclusion of their collegiate careers.
“It was definitely a tremendous honor and a real privilege to meet the other awardees, many of whom I have heard of and have done some incredible things,” Aunapu Mann said.
She returned to Annapolis this past fall to spend three days at the academy and spoke to the Navy women’s soccer team at that time. Gabarra calls her famous former player “an incredibly down-to-earth and humble person who is extremely well-rounded.”
Former teammate Anne Kipp Klokaw exchanged emails with Aunapu Mann while the latter was living and working aboard the International Space Station. Aunapu Mann had to exercise while in orbit and wanted a goal to work toward, so she and Kipp Klokaw agreed do the Ragnar Trail Run in Zion National Park last spring.
Kipp Klokaw said every member of the Navy women’s soccer program from 1995-98 is “immensely proud” of what their former teammate has achieved.
Aunapu Mann credits college athletics with helping her reach the rarified air of astronaut.
“There are so many similarities between the team I’m on now and the Navy women’s soccer team I was part of for four years,” she said. “As a college athlete, I didn’t realize how powerful that was going to be.”