Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Linkedin
  • WhatsApp
  • YouTube
  • Associate Journalism
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • 033-46046046
  • editor@artifex.news
Artifex.News

Artifex.News

Stay Connected. Stay Informed.

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • Nation
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Toggle search form
  • Access Denied
    Access Denied Nation
  • Trump claims Modi has assured him India will not buy Russian oil
    Trump claims Modi has assured him India will not buy Russian oil World
  • SEBI confirms market ban against 22 entities in Sadhna Broadcast stock manipulation case
    SEBI confirms market ban against 22 entities in Sadhna Broadcast stock manipulation case Business
  • Access Denied
    Access Denied Nation
  • Russian Military Says It Captured 2 East Ukrainian Villages
    Russian Military Says It Captured 2 East Ukrainian Villages World
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Access Denied
    Woman Jumps From High-Rise In Ghaziabad, Family Alleges Harassment Over Dowry: Cops Nation
  • Access Denied Sports
What is India’s first orbital data centre satellite?

What is India’s first orbital data centre satellite?

Posted on May 9, 2026 By admin


The story so far:

On May 4, Pixxel, a Bengaluru-based imaging satellite company, said that it would partner with the AI firm Sarvam to launch what is being described as India’s first ‘orbital data centre’ satellite, named Pathfinder. This is expected to be a 200 kg class satellite scheduled for orbit by the fourth quarter of 2026. It will carry datacentre-class GPUs (graphics processing units) alongside Pixxel’s hyperspectral imaging camera, the company’s bread-and-butter business.

What is an orbital data centre?

It is a constellation of satellites carrying the same kind of GPUs found in terrestrial data centres. It can train and run AI models in orbit rather than only relaying data to ground stations. Such a centre can do more demanding work than the low-power “edge” processors that conventional satellites use for tasks like signal compression. Edge computing on earth refers to the practice of running computation close to where data is generated rather than in a centralised cloud, and the same logic, applied in orbit, is what space-based compute promises to extend.

Pixxel’s Pathfinder is being built as a single-satellite demonstrator, designed to test whether ground-grade hardware can be made to function reliably in the harsh, hot environment of low Earth orbit. “It will start off as being one satellite, obviously, that we will try to launch before the end of this year,” Awais Ahmed, the company’s chief executive, told The Hindu.

Why are global firms suddenly interested?

Three factors have converged in the past two years, prompting large tech companies to strive towards making such centres real. Data centres are being constrained by limits on energy availability, land, water, and local regulation, all of which have been amplified by the demands of AI. In the right orbit, solar power is effectively continuous and offers free electricity, which proponents regard as the strongest argument for moving computation to space.

Earth observation satellites also generate detailed, heavy image files that are expensive to downlink; processing the data in orbit and beaming down only the conclusions has long been seen as a way to ease that bottleneck.

The third factor is competitive positioning. SpaceX CEO, Elon Musk said on X in 2025 that “simply scaling up Starlink V3 satellites, which have high-speed laser links, would work. SpaceX will be doing this.” He also argued that “Starship (the company’s most powerful rocket) could deliver 100GW/year to high Earth orbit within four to five years if we can solve the other parts of the equation.” Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, Microsoft’s Azure Space, and Lonestar Data Holdings have already begun pilot deployments. None of these efforts has yet produced a commercial-scale orbital data centre.

What are the challenges?

The GPU chips powered by electricity from solar panels become hot. Now space may be cold, and common sense may suggest it is a natural sink for the heat. However, space is also empty and its vacuum eliminates convection. This is the mechanism by which warm air on earth is normally carried away from terrestrial servers; in orbit, a hot GPU chip is effectively an oven unable to fan away its own waste energy, with no air to carry it off. The only solution to this is radiation, which requires that heat be pumped through ammonia-filled loops to deployable panels, where it can be radiated as infrared light into space. The history of crewed spaceflight is studded with reminders of how unforgiving this regime can be.

Radiation damage is the second problem and one that has shaped the design of every long-duration mission flown to date. ‘Bit flips’ — where bits and bytes of computers randomly change — and long-term semiconductor degradation are caused by cosmic rays, and radiation-hardened chips, which govern most space hardware, typically lag commercial GPUs by years. Power requires storage for eclipse periods, and maintenance is effectively impossible without robotic servicing, so redundancy must be designed in from the start.

What does the Pixxel–Sarvam partnership actually involve?

The Pathfinder satellite will be designed, built, launched, and operated by Pixxel. Sarvam, an Indian AI firm, will provide what it describes as the AI backbone, with full-stack language models being run on the satellite’s GPU layer for both training and inference. Pixxel’s hyperspectral camera will be carried on the same platform, giving the mission an immediate use case: imagery captured in orbit can be analysed in orbit, with only the conclusions transmitted to Earth. Mr. Ahmed declined to disclose costs, the number of GPUs, or the launch provider, saying the choice between ISRO and SpaceX would be determined by slot availability. However, the Pixxel team has several experts who have worked with the Indian Space Research Organisation and have experience in thermal management in space.

Can data crunching in space ever be cheaper than on ground?

Not yet, and not for some time, on the available evidence. Mr. Ahmed said that a single satellite carrying a given number of GPUs is more expensive than the same hardware on Earth. The argument for eventual parity is built on three assumptions: that constellations will be scaled to tens of thousands of satellites; that launch costs will be reduced sharply once SpaceX’s Starship is operational; and that the absence of cooling and grid-power expenses in orbit will eventually offset the higher capital outlay. Mr. Ahmed set the horizon at 5-10 years. “It would take about 100-500 satellites to replace a data centre in India and if someone were to pay for it, we could launch them even in 24 months,” he said. Independent assessments have been markedly more cautious than the timelines offered by Pixxel and its peers. Edge processing on satellites is judged viable in the near term by academic and agency reviews, but a wholesale replacement of terrestrial cloud is treated as a 10-to-30-year proposition.

Published – May 10, 2026 03:55 am IST



Source link

Science Tags:india

Post navigation

Previous Post: Playing in IPL has helped upgrade my all-format batting, says Bethell

Related Posts

  • Particles called quarks hold the key to the final fate of some stars
    Particles called quarks hold the key to the final fate of some stars Science
  • After traversing 100 metres, Pragyan prepares for long night of -200 degree Celsius on Moon
    After traversing 100 metres, Pragyan prepares for long night of -200 degree Celsius on Moon Science
  • The Science Quiz | A quiz on science films at the Oscars through history
    The Science Quiz | A quiz on science films at the Oscars through history Science
  • Rare caracals spotted in Thar Desert near India-Pakistan border
    Rare caracals spotted in Thar Desert near India-Pakistan border Science
  • Android phones have brought early quake warnings to 98 countries
    Android phones have brought early quake warnings to 98 countries Science
  • Blue: the colour that moved kings before poets
    Blue: the colour that moved kings before poets Science

More Related Articles

As India’s summer begins, understanding the heat and health conundrum As India’s summer begins, understanding the heat and health conundrum Science
Brains that don’t see in greyscale first over-rely on colours: Project Prakash study Brains that don’t see in greyscale first over-rely on colours: Project Prakash study Science
Science This Week | India becomes the first country to land on Moon’s south pole and more Science This Week | India becomes the first country to land on Moon’s south pole and more Science
India successfully test-fires Agni-5 ballistic missile from Odisha India successfully test-fires Agni-5 ballistic missile from Odisha Science
IISc scientists find a way to break down ‘biofilm barriers’ by using cow’s gut enzyme to aid entry of drugs IISc scientists find a way to break down ‘biofilm barriers’ by using cow’s gut enzyme to aid entry of drugs Science
Leafy chemistry: What happens when a leaf changes colour in autumn? Leafy chemistry: What happens when a leaf changes colour in autumn? Science
SiteLock

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022

Categories

  • Business
  • Nation
  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Recent Posts

  • What is India’s first orbital data centre satellite?
  • Playing in IPL has helped upgrade my all-format batting, says Bethell
  • IPL 2026 | Prince and Mohsin have it in them to play for India, says Arun
  • RCB takes on MI, looks to return to winning ways
  • Putin says Ukraine war is ‘heading to an end’

Recent Comments

  1. DonaldGlymn on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  2. ShaneElden on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  3. JasonCobby on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  4. Andrewveift on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  5. KennethCof on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  • Male Golfers Shubhankar Sharma, Gaganjeet Bhullar Qualify For Paris Olympics
    Male Golfers Shubhankar Sharma, Gaganjeet Bhullar Qualify For Paris Olympics Sports
  • Parliament clears Bill to allow 100% FDI in insurance sector
    Parliament clears Bill to allow 100% FDI in insurance sector Business
  • Hillary Clinton Mocks Donald Trump At Democratic Convention
    Hillary Clinton Mocks Donald Trump At Democratic Convention World
  • Viral ‘IITian Baba’ Expelled From Akhara At Maha Kumbh. He Responds
    Viral ‘IITian Baba’ Expelled From Akhara At Maha Kumbh. He Responds Nation
  • Muhurat trading: Sensex rises 448 points, Nifty rallies above 24,300
    Muhurat trading: Sensex rises 448 points, Nifty rallies above 24,300 Business
  • Iran pauses the process to implement a new, stricter hijab law for women, official says
    Iran pauses the process to implement a new, stricter hijab law for women, official says World
  • 60-mile march for democracy arrives in Washington from Philadelphia
    60-mile march for democracy arrives in Washington from Philadelphia World
  • Putin has been briefed on U.S. proposals for Ukraine peace plan, the Kremlin says
    Putin has been briefed on U.S. proposals for Ukraine peace plan, the Kremlin says World

Editor-in-Chief:
Mohammad Ariff,
MSW, MAJMC, BSW, DTL, CTS, CNM, CCR, CAL, RSL, ASOC.
editor@artifex.news

Associate Editors:
1. Zenellis R. Tuba,
zenelis@artifex.news
2. Haris Daniyel
daniyel@artifex.news

Photograher:
Rohan Das
rohan@artifex.news

Artifex.News offers Online Paid Internships to college students from India and Abroad. Interns will get a PRESS CARD and other online offers.
Send your CV (Subjectline: Paid Internship) to internship@artifex.news

Links:
Associate Journalism
About Us
Privacy Policy

News Links:
Breaking News
World
Nation
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Lifestyle

Registered Office:
72/A, Elliot Road, Kolkata - 700016
Tel: 033-22277777, 033-22172217
Email: office@artifex.news

Editorial Office / News Desk:
No. 13, Mezzanine Floor, Esplanade Metro Rail Station,
12 J. L. Nehru Road, Kolkata - 700069.
(Entry from Gate No. 5)
Tel: 033-46011099, 033-46046046
Email: editor@artifex.news

Copyright © 2023 Artifex.News Newsportal designed by Artifex Infotech.