设为首页加入收藏
  • 首页
  • Start up
  • 当前位置:首页 >Start up >【】

    【】

    发布时间:2025-09-15 11:22:55 来源:都市天下脉观察 作者:Start up

    Latest

    AI

    Amazon

    Apps

    Biotech & Health

    Climate

    Cloud Computing

    Commerce

    Crypto

    Enterprise

    EVs

    Fintech

    Fundraising

    Gadgets

    Gaming

    Google

    Government & Policy

    Hardware

    Instagram

    Layoffs

    Media & Entertainment

    Meta

    Microsoft

    Privacy

    Robotics

    Security

    Social

    Space

    Startups

    TikTok

    Transportation

    Venture

    More from TechCrunch

    Staff

    Events

    Startup Battlefield

    StrictlyVC

    Newsletters

    Podcasts

    Videos

    Partner Content

    TechCrunch Brand Studio

    Crunchboard

    Contact Us

    Inversion Ray capsule
    Image Credits:Inversion Space (opens in a new window)
    Space

    Inversion Space will test its space-based delivery tech in October

    Aria Alamalhodaei 7:00 AM PDT · April 17, 2024

    Inversion Space is aptly named. The three-year-old startup’s primary concern is not getting things to space, but bringing them back — transforming the ultimate high ground into “a transportation layer for Earth.”

    The company’s plan — ultra-fast, on-demand deliveries to anywhere on Earth — sounds like pie in the sky, but it’s the sort of moonshot goal that could transform terrestrial cargo transportation. The aim is to send up fleets of earth-orbiting vehicles that will be able to shoot back to Earth at Mach speeds, slow with specially-made parachutes and deliver cargo in minutes.

    Inversion has developed a pathfinder vehicle, called Ray, that’s a technical precursor to a larger platform that will debut in 2026. Ray will head to space this October, on SpaceX’s Transporter-12 rideshare mission, paving the way for Inversion’s future plans on orbit (and back).

    Ray is small — about twice the diameter of a standard frisbee — and will spend anywhere from one to five weeks in space, depending on factors like weather and how the orbit aligns with the landing site, Inversion CEO Justin Fiaschetti explained in a recent interview.

    This first mission will have three phases: the initial on-orbit phase, where the spacecraft will power on, charge its batteries and hopefully send telemetry to the ground. During the second phase, Ray will use its onboard propulsion system to slow down the vehicle so it starts losing altitude and reentering the atmosphere. The reentry capsule will separate from the satellite bus (both designed in-house), with the latter structure burning up.

    The third and final phase will see Ray slow down using a supersonic drogue parachute, from a reentry speed of Mach 1.8 to Mach 0.2. The main parachute will then deploy, further slowing the capsule to a soft splashdown off the coast of California.

    Impressively, the company has designed and built almost all of the Ray vehicle in-house, from the propulsion system to the structure to the parachutes. This last component is key: Almost no space company designs parachutes themselves, and they’re incredibly challenging to engineer from the ground up. Inversion’s engineering team completed qualification testing of the deployment and parachute systems last year.

    Techcrunch event

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    San Francisco | October 27-29, 2025 REGISTER NOW

    We’ve completed a successful qualification campaign of the full recovery system for Ray, our pathfinder vehicle! Both of the parachutes and their deployment systems have been developed in-house by our recovery engineers, Connor & Daniel. pic.twitter.com/mPquy1nGbE

    — Inversion (@InversionSpace) September 5, 2023

    Fiaschetti said strong vertical integration has helped the company move so quickly.

    “The purpose of our Ray vehicle is to develop technology for our next-gen vehicle. As such, we’ve built basically the entire vehicle in-house,” Fiaschetti said. “What we saw was that if we can build in-house now, do the hard thing first, that allows us to scale very quickly and meet our customer needs.”

    The reentry vehicle is totally passive — meaning it doesn’t have active controls to navigate its reentry to Earth — but the company’s larger next-gen vehicle, called Arc, will have “football field-level” accuracy.

    Inversion was founded by CEO Justin Fiaschetti and CTO Austin Briggs in 2021, but the two go back further: They met when they sat next to each other at a Boston University freshman matriculation ceremony. The pair eventually got jobs in southern California — Briggs, as a propulsion development engineer at ABL Space Systems, while Fiaschetti had brief engineering stints at Relativity and SpaceX — and they were actually roommates when they first floated the idea of developing technology to deliver cargo anywhere on Earth.

    The company went through Y Combinator in the summer of 2021 (it was one of our favorites from the cohort) and closed its $10 million seed round in November that same year.

    “We’ve been off to the races ever since,” Fiaschetti said. The company’s grown to 25 employees, who are based out of Torrance, California, where they have a 5,000-square-foot facility. The startup also owns five acres of land in the Mojave Desert, where it conducts engine testing. The scaling of the team and this first mission have been entirely financed by that seed round.

    The startup sees promising markets in both government agencies and private companies; both segments could use Inversion’s reusable platform as an on-orbit testbed, or as a delivery vehicle to a private commercial space station. Inversion is aiming on pushing both reusability and duration-on-orbit “to the maximum” to bring down costs and also to support different mission profiles, Fiaschetti said.

    Inversion aims to fly the next-gen vehicle, Arc, for the first time in 2026. While the two co-founders declined to provide more details on the spacecraft, the company’s website says it will be capable of carrying more than 150 kilograms of cargo, to provide “proliferated” delivery in space.

    “We are testing hardware consistently. We’re developing an infrastructure to be able to scale ourselves. Just as our decision to bring parachutes in-house was a decision because the parachutes are so directly applicable to what we’re building, it’s making those kinds of key decisions that allows us to move much faster than another reentry vehicle would take much longer to develop.”

    • 上一篇:Web3 messaging infrastructure Notifi raises $10M seed round co
    • 下一篇:Black startup founders raised just $187 million in the third quarter

      相关文章

      • Revel raises $7.8M to become the Instagram and Robinhood of NFT platforms
      • Aepnus wants to create a circular economy for key battery manufacturing materials
      • Meet the Finnish biotech startup bringing a long
      • Prosus writes off $22 billion Indian edtech giant Byju's to zero
      • VC deal activity fell in 2022, signaling tough times ahead
      • Kinnect's new app aims to help families record and store generational memories
      • How VanMoof’s new owners plan to win over its old customers
      • How a couple of former Pinterest search experts caught Biz Stone’s attention
      • This startup is bringing precision control for gamers to the humble keyboard
      • Garry Tan has revealed his ‘secret sauce’ for getting into Y Combinator

        随便看看

      • Surfe brings your CRM data to LinkedIn — and vice versa
      • Tengo untangles the messy world of public sector procurement with AI
      • Groups save big at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024
      • The Way app offers a chance to meditate alongside a Zen master
      • MedCrypt lands $25M injection to secure vulnerable medical devices
      • Dust grabs another $16M for its enterprise AI assistants connected to internal data
      • Don't miss StrictlyVC in DC next week
      • Foresite Capital raises $900M sixth fund for investing in life sciences companies
      • Sample Series A pitch deck: Vori's $10M deck
      • How VanMoof’s new owners plan to win over its old customers
      • Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【】,都市天下脉观察   辽ICP备198741324484号sitemap