All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Dr. Danielle Rosales is Director of Business Development Technologies at Space Tango and holds a doctorate in Human Factors researching public support for space‑based manufacturing and supply chains.
LambdaVision is partnered with microgravity research firm Space Tango for its in-space manufacturing process.
Space Tango is launching its second Mambo facility to the ISS.
Twyman Clements is the Co-Founder and President of Space Tango, developing automated products under microgravity conditions.
Space Tango designed Mambo as a mid-deck locker architecture to host automated investigations in space.
Space Tango completed initial use of the recently installed Mambo facility on 2024-12-05.
Auxilium Biotechnologies and Space Tango collaborated to manufacture the NeuroSpan Bridge using the AMP-1 bioprinter on the International Space Station.
Space Tango will deliver CubeLab investigations from the University of Notre Dame and Florida International University on NG-21.
Space Tango is launching a new middeck locker facility named the Microgravity-based Automated Manufacturing and Bioprocessing Outpost (Mambo) on Northrop Grumman’s 21st Commercial Resupply Services Mission (NG-21).
Space Tango successfully launched life science investigations on SpaceX’s 30th Commercial Resupply Services (CRS-30) mission from Cape Canaveral, Florida on 2024-03-21.
Since 2017, Space Tango has provided facilities to support iterative research and development and manufacturing in microgravity environments.
Space Tango’s CRS-30 payloads will utilize automated, platform-agnostic hardware that permits imaging and microscopy on orbit and the return of scientific samples for further analysis.
Since 2017 Space Tango has provided facilities to support iterative research and development and manufacturing in microgravity environments.
Space Tango announced the donation on 2024-03-21.
The donated Space Tango spaceflight hardware will go on display at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum when the "At Home in Space" exhibition opens in 2026.
CRS-30 is scheduled to dock with the International Space Station on 2024-03-23, after which payloads will be installed and Space Tango investigators will receive data in real time.
Space Tango has received over $60,000,000 through NASA and additional grant programming.
Space Tango was awarded a NASA SBIR Ignite contract in December 2023 to support development of a robotic laboratory hood called TangoBox.
Space Tango was awarded approximately $5,000,000 to support the Biological and Physical Sciences division within NASA’s Science Mission Directorate for the Artemis II mission.
Since 2017, Space Tango has provided facilities to support iterative research and development and manufacturing in microgravity environments.