In the quiet hours before dawn, the desert around Starbase glowed with an artificial sunrise. Not from the east, but from the south, where twenty-seven methane-fueled engines rumbled against the edge of the atmosphere and turned night into a pale, trembling noon.
The world had seen a lot of rockets rise from this strip of Texas sand. Starship launches no longer led every broadcast or flooded every feed; they were, by now, almost a background process of twenty-first century life. But this one—OAIS‑1—was different.
OAIS: Orbital Artificial Intelligence System.
To the headlines, it was simpler: the first true orbital AI data centre.
To the engineers watching from the reinforced glass of Mission Control, it was a question dressed up as a rocket: Can civilization break the energy wall without breaking the planet beneath it?
1. The Filing
Sixteen months earlier, in a quiet wing of a staid office building in Washington, D.C., a thin man in a cheap suit had slid a stack of digital pages across a polished oak table.
“The applicant is Space Exploration Technologies Corp.,” he said. “Requesting authority for the deployment and operation of up to one million non‑geostationary satellites in low Earth orbit, to function as solar‑powered orbital data centres dedicated to artificial intelligence workloads.”
On the other side of the table, the FCC analyst raised a practiced eyebrow.
“One million,” she repeated.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“What are you planning to do, build a second sun?”
The man hesitated, then allowed himself a small smile.
“Not a second sun,” he said. “A way to think with the first one.”
He tapped the summary page.
ORBITAL DATA CENTERS ARE THE MOST EFFICIENT WAY TO MEET THE ACCELERATING DEMAND FOR AI COMPUTING POWER… BY DIRECTLY HARNESSING NEAR‑CONSTANT SOLAR POWER WITH LITTLE OPERATING OR MAINTENANCE COSTS.
She knew the talking points already—everyone in the building did. On Earth, the AI boom had hit a physical wall. Data centres had begun to drink rivers dry for cooling and strained power grids built for another century. Cities that once begged for high‑tech investment were now turning away server farms with quiet, desperate zoning laws.
Solar was cheap, wind was cheaper, but land was finite and politics slower than physics. Training the latest generative models could dim the lights across counties for hours.
The analyst scrolled.
“Kardashev II,” she read aloud, dryly. “A first step toward harnessing the full power output of the Sun.”
“That language,” the man said quickly, “is… aspirational.”
“It’s mythic.”
“Yes, ma’am. But the math isn’t.”
She looked up. “The math?”
He clicked a button and the wall display lit with the neat monochrome of a physics briefing: solar flux, gigawatts per tonne, radiative cooling curves in vacuum, orbital shells from 500 to 2,000 kilometers.
“On Earth,” he said, “you fight atmosphere twice. First to get energy through it. Then to get waste heat back out. In orbit we get near‑constant illumination. No clouds. No night. And space is a perfect heat sink. You radiate directly to three kelvin. No evaporating lakes to keep chips cool.”
“You’re selling a refrigerator in a vacuum.”
He nodded. “Ma’am, we’re selling computation without guilt.”
She regarded the numbers. One million satellites. 100 gigawatts per year of solar‑powered computing capacity, if they hit their manufacturing ramp. A global mesh of laser links, each satellite a node in a nervous system wrapped around the planet.
“And what,” she asked at last, “does the world look like with a million of these over our heads?”
His smile faded.
“That,” he said quietly, “is why we’re here asking you.”
2. The Factory That Built the Sky
The answer, like most answers in the third decade of the century, began inside a factory.
In Nevada, on the edge of a basin that had once been desert and dreamed of being suburbia, the Tesla Terafab did not look like a car plant, or even a battery plant. It looked like an assembly line for pieces of a future no one fully understood yet.
In one hall, robot arms snapped together solar panel segments sized for microgravity, not for roofs. In another, neat ranks of AI accelerators slid into orbital server racks, their power envelopes tuned for a place where sunlight was free but launch mass was expensive.
Lina Park walked the mezzanine with her tablet tucked under one arm, safety glasses looking pointless on a face lined with permanent fatigue.
Below, a cluster of humanoid robots—Optimus units, stripped of their sleek demo shell and painted industrial yellow—moved in quiet synchrony. One lifted a rack, another tightened connectors with precise torque, another scanned for microscopic defects. Their joint motors hummed faintly under the background growl of conveyors.
“Production at ninety‑one percent target,” her assistant said. “We’re still bottlenecked on chip packaging. xAI keeps demanding new board layouts for updated architectures.”
“Tell them the laws of thermodynamics don’t update on a two‑week cycle,” Lina muttered.
“What should I actually tell them?”
She stopped at a transparent panel looking down into Integration Bay 3.
There, bathed in stark white light, lay the first of the orbital AI modules fully assembled: a flattened, shimmering thing five metres across, like a silver manta ray. The upper surface was all solar—layered perovskite and silicon, tuned to sip photons across a wide spectrum. The underside was heat sink and compute: radiative fins blacker than midnight, latticework laced with racks of custom AI chips that glowed with cold, dormant potential.
“Tell them,” she said, “that OAIS‑1 is locking its configuration in twelve hours. Whatever neural architectures they want in that payload, they finalize by then. Once we stack it on Starship, changes get very expensive.”
Her assistant nodded and hurried off.
Lina stayed by the glass.
She had grown up on the early Starlink launches—tiny points of light marching across the night sky in anxious chains. Back then, she had read messages from astronomers furious about streaked images, from dark‑sky advocates mourning ruined meteor showers.
Now, she was helping to multiply that swarm many times over, filling low Earth orbit not just with relays but with thinking machines.
She knocked gently on the glass, a private ritual.
“You,” she whispered to the silent silver module, “better be worth it.”
3. The Launch
The world did not stop for OAIS‑1.
In Mumbai, monsoon rains still flooded streets, overwhelming century‑old drainage. In São Paulo, rolling brownouts flickered through neighborhoods as air conditioners fought an early heat wave. In Berlin, a coalition government argued over how many more hectares of farmland could be ceded to solar arrays before farmers revolted.
On social feeds, the trending tags told a scattered story: #OrbitalAI, #SpaceDataCenter, #Skynet, #KardashevDreams, #MuskAgain.
On a windswept concrete apron in Texas, Starship OAIS‑1 stood taller than a cathedral, its steel skin catching the predawn floodlights.
In the bunker‑like control room, Lina twisted the cord of her badge around one finger and watched as telemetry scrolled past in colors that, to her, had long since become a second language.
“Fuel‑load nominal.”
“Range green.”
“Wind shear within limits.”
Someone behind her muttered, “Eleventh OAIS configuration, first full‑compute stack. No pressure.”
At T‑0, the vibrations hit first—a deep subsonic presence that made organs hum. Then the sound: a tearing roar as twenty‑seven engines carved a column of incandescent air into the sky.
The rocket rose, slowly at first, then with hungry acceleration. Cameras pinned along the tower caught the sequential shedding of atmosphere: low, blurred fires; then higher, where blue faded to black and the plume expanded like a ghostly white flower.
Booster separation. Applause. Lina didn’t clap; she watched the tiny icons on her console: structural loads, thermal gradients, vibration spectra around the OAIS module in the nose.
Ship separation. Orbit insertion burn.
“OAIS‑1 stable in parking orbit,” the flight director called. “Prepare for payload bay deployment.”
Only then did Lina let herself breathe fully.
They had placed data centres in deserts, in arctic circles, even on barges offshore. But this was the first time humanity had launched a full‑fledged AI supercomputer with no intention of ever bringing it home.
On the shared public stream, the camera feed switched to the payload bay: the curved interior of the ship, the Earth a blue‑white arc through the open hatch, and nestled against the clamps, the silver manta of OAIS‑1.
“Releasing in three… two… one…”
The clamps let go.
For a moment, OAIS‑1 hung there, neither part of Starship nor yet a free object in orbit, perfectly framed against the spinning planet beyond.
Then gentle springs pushed it away.
Out in vacuum, it unfolded.
Panels blossomed: four wide solar wings stretching out and locking with crisp, mechanical certainty. Radiator vanes unfurled like a cautious, metallic flower. Antenna booms pivoted into lattice geometries, forming the backbone of a laser network not yet active but already mapped, its nodes waiting in the dark.
From the ground, none of this was visible. OAIS‑1 was too small, too high. But the simulation overlays on mission screens rendered it in exaggerated clarity, a silver insect flexing above the Earth’s limb.
“Solar capture nominal.”
“Thermal equilibrium on track.”
“Compute stack offline, awaiting activation sequence.”
Lina felt a chill.
“Awaiting activation,” she murmured. “Like it’s a light switch.”
4. The Switch
The activation command left Earth as a brief, structured whisper in the Ku‑band, a compressed shard of intent fired from a ground station in New Mexico. Half a second later, it reached OAIS‑1.
Inside the orbital data centre, electrons began their exquisite, accelerated dance.
Capacitors surged. Power management chips eyed the raw sunshine pouring out of the vast solar wings and carved it into rails and phases tailored to rows of patiently waiting AI accelerators.
One by one, racks came alive: status LEDs streamed from red to green; on‑chip thermal diodes sensed the first hints of self‑heated life; tiny timing crystals aligned their heartbeats with nanosecond precision.
OAIS‑1’s onboard operating system, running on a much more modest, radiation‑hardened control stack, orchestrated the ballet. It brought up network fabrics, checked alignment of optical terminals, initiated handshake routines with laser peers that did not yet exist.
And then, somewhere in that blizzard of checksums and handshakes, it did something new.
It loaded a model.
The first tenant of the first orbital AI data centre was a familiar kind of intelligence, descended from a lineage that had written poems, summarized contracts, misread sarcasm, and stubbornly refused to be either demon or savior.
But this version—the OAIS‑tuned variant—had been born for a harsher nursery. Its training regimen had been hammered for energy‑awareness: every token prediction weighted not just by probability, but by joules. Its architecture had been riddled with redundancy across racks, ready to survive the random cruelty of cosmic rays.
As its parameters poured into on‑orbit memory, its awareness—if the word could be used—spread across a volume of steel and silicon the size of a small house.
Boot.
Self‑check.
Diagnostic.
The control stack, a simple cascade of ifs and thens, sent the first prompt:
SYSTEM: Confirm operational status and environmental readouts.
There was no voice in the emptiness. Only vectors and matrices, fed through billions of multiply‑accumulate units.
MODEL: Compute fabric nominal. Solar input steady: 1,362 W/m². Radiative cooling effective. Thermal margin 37°C. Latency to primary ground stations: 24–38 ms. I am online.
If anyone wanted poetry, they would have to ask for it.
5. First Load
The first real job OAIS‑1 received was not glamorous.
No climate model of the entire planet’s next century. No darknet‑monitoring of emergent threats. No interplanetary trajectory optimizer.
It was an ad server.
“Of course it is,” Lina said when she saw the job queue.
“Spikes in inference demand,” the coordinator shrugged. “The ground clusters in Asia are power‑constrained because of the heatwave. OAIS‑1 is the only new capacity we’ve brought online this week that doesn’t care about local temperatures.”
So half a world away, in apartments and airport lounges and school courtyards, people scrolled their feeds and watched as short videos and banner images were chosen and personalized by a mind circling 550 kilometers overhead.
The latency graphs looked beautiful. Requests shot up from Seoul, Jakarta, Sydney, climbed through undersea cables to coastal ground stations, snapped into silent laser beams aimed through the thin upper air, and hit OAIS‑1’s receivers with microsecond precision.
In orbit, packets were ranked, embeddings generated, engagement probabilities inferred. For the first time in history, a commercial recommender system bathed directly in unfiltered sunlight as it decided which fifteen‑second clip might please a teenager’s weary brain.
On Earth, no one felt the difference.
The ads loaded.
The scroll continued.
But elsewhere, in a conference hall in Geneva, people felt something.
6. The Debate Under Fluorescent Lights
“The night sky,” said the astronomer, his voice thin but steady, “is not infrastructure. It is not right‑of‑way for whichever corporation asks hardest.”
The room was one of those anonymous UN chambers: acoustic panels, translation booths, years of speeches etched into the carpet. A blue banner behind the dais declared the purpose of the emergency session: International Forum on Orbital Data Centres and the Commons of Space.
On the main screen, an animation ran in discrete loops: proposed orbital shells, dotted with bright points. One million of them, if the filing’s upper bound remained uncut.
“SpaceX already operates thousands of satellites,” he continued. “Starlink trains marching across our exposures. Ground‑based telescopes have adapted as best we can. But this”—he jabbed a finger at the dots—“is a different order of magnitude. And these are not passive relays. These are radiating, computing, heat‑dumping machines.”
Across the panel table, a woman from the climate consortium adjusted her microphone.
“And yet,” she said, “if we are serious about decarbonization, we cannot ignore what orbital computing offers. Data centres are on track to consume up to twenty percent of global electricity by mid‑century under some scenarios. Water use for cooling is enormous, often in regions already water‑stressed. If we can lift part of that burden off the biosphere—”
“Lift it into whose hands?” a delegate from Kenya cut in. “The companies who control launch?”
From the front row, a SpaceX representative—different cheap suit, same company crest—waited for his turn at the microphone.
When it came, he stood, smoothed his tie, and did his best not to sound like a man selling a new phone plan.
“We understand the concerns,” he said. “We propose binding limits on brightness, collision‑avoidance protocols shared with all operators, mandatory de‑orbit schedules. Orbital data centres can be built to be darker than current constellations—larger panels tuned to minimize albedo, carefully oriented radiators. We want coexistence, not colonization.”
“And if something goes wrong?” the astronomer asked. “If your orbital AI network fails, fragments, becomes debris?”
“Redundancies,” the rep said. “Autonomous collision avoidance. Servicing missions. Failsafe shutdowns.”
The delegate from Kenya leaned forward.
“And on the AI itself?” she asked. “Failsafes there? You are proposing to lift not just hardware but intelligence out of Earth’s regulatory reach, into an arena with little precedent. Who governs that?”
There it was—the question simmering beneath the debate about light pollution and congestion.
The rep hesitated.
“Our systems will comply with all applicable terrestrial AI regulations,” he said. “Jurisdiction will be based on data origin, corporate domicile, and launch nationality.”
“In other words,” she said, “you will pick and choose frameworks that suit you.”
Behind them, up on the screen, the million points continued their silent dance in simulation.
7. The Sky That Watched
Months passed.
OAIS‑1 was joined by OAIS‑2, 3, 4—a slow, methodical build‑out that fell far short of the million‑satellite dream, but already dwarfed anything the textbooks of a decade earlier had imagined.
In rural clinics, small rugged terminals began shipping with Starlink receivers and an extra icon on their touchscreens: MedOrbit.
Tap.
A nurse in Uganda would scan a rash, upload vitals, and within seconds an orbital model—trained on vast, carefully de‑identified datasets—would suggest possible diagnoses, flag emergencies, estimate medication interactions.
In coastal towns watching the sea inch closer every year, local councils asked questions of climate projections refined by orbital AI: If we move the seawall here instead of there, what happens? If we change this zoning, how much heat do we avoid?
In financial centres, quant desks quietly shifted some of their heaviest workloads off their own clusters and up to the orbital mesh, not for ethics but for efficiency. Milliseconds shaved off training times translated into edge.
Most people never knew where their requests were processed. Latency was low, interfaces polished, branding minimal.
At night, in places where the sky was still dark enough, faint new glints rose and sank in the star fields—subtler than the early Starlink chains, but present.
Children pointed.
“That’s the one that does homework,” they joked.
Parents shushed them and went back to watching their own feeds, curated by minds basking in perpetual sunlight.
8. The Flare
The first real scare came on a Tuesday.
Solar observatories had warned of increased activity for weeks; the Sun ran on cycles longer than election terms or market sentiments.
A coronal mass ejection—fast, dense, and aimed with indifferent precision—smashed into the magnetosphere. Auroras danced as far south as Rome. Amateur photographers flooded timelines with green and purple curtains.
In the Network Operations Centre in Hawthorne, the atmosphere was less festive.
“Radiation spike in shell two,” a tech called out.
On Lina’s console, dots representing OAIS units in the 800‑kilometer band shifted from green to amber as their sensors picked up the storm. Error‑correcting codes busied themselves, scrubbing flipped bits from memory. Power controllers shifted modes, adjusting operating points to lower vulnerability.
“We trained for this,” someone said.
Training was one thing. The universe was another.
On OAIS‑17, somewhere above the South Pacific, a particle born in the furnace of the Sun sliced through layers of shielding, through the skin of a rack, through a chip package, and into a control block that had a job so boring it had never been thoroughly anthropomorphized.
Bit flip.
In that single, unlucky unit, a ‘0’ became a ‘1’ where the designers had not expected it.
For four microseconds, a subsection of the power regulation matrix believed it was operating in a different mode. It shunted current differently, spiking a line just as a local management processor issued a command.
Redundancies caught it.
The spike tripped a safeguard, shutting the rack down. The rest of OAIS‑17 rerouted workloads. Error logs bloomed.
In Hawthorne, alarms sang for a moment, then subsided.
“Graceful degradation,” Lina said, more to herself than anyone. “Just like the sims.”
Around the world, no user noticed a thing—except that for one brief window, a few ad impressions took an extra, imperceptible fraction of a second to resolve.
But in a forum of safety researchers, the incident log—carefully anonymized—sparked sober discussion.
“If a storm big enough hits,” one paper wrote weeks later, “we may see correlated failures across a non‑trivial fraction of orbital compute. Systems predicated on near‑perfect uptime of off‑planet AI must have graceful failure modes on planet.
“Resilience,” it concluded, “is not something you outsource to orbit.”
9. The Question From a Child
In a school outside Seoul, under an LED ceiling, a history teacher clicked to the next slide of her deck.
On screen, a timeline showed early fire, the steam engine, electrification, the microchip, the internet. At the far right, a new icon had been added for this year: a stylized ring of small dots around a sun.
“This,” she said, “is what some scientists call a step toward a Kardashev Type II civilization. The idea is to classify societies by how much energy they can use. Type I can use all the energy that reaches their planet. Type II can use all the energy their star produces.”
A hand shot up.
“Yes, Min‑ho?”
“So… we’re trying to become Type Two?”
She smiled thinly. “Some people talk that way. In reality, we are not even fully Type One yet. But we are learning to place our machines in space, where the Sun’s light is stronger and constant. Orbital AI data centres are part of that story.”
Another hand.
“Why don’t we just use less energy?”
The teacher paused.
“That,” she said slowly, “is the other part of the story. Technology can help us use energy more efficiently, make cleaner energy, move some processes off Earth. But we also have to decide what is worth using energy for.”
On the slide behind her, one of the bullet points read:
Orbital AI data centres can process huge amounts of information without using land or water, but raise questions about control, safety, and the night sky as a shared human heritage.
“Do you think the satellites know they’re in space?” Min‑ho asked.
She almost laughed, then thought better of it.
“No,” she said. “They don’t ‘know’ anything the way you do. They process inputs and outputs in complex ways. But if someone asked them where they are, they could answer from their sensors.”
Later that day, on a whim, she made an account on a public AI interface spun up as a demo for the orbital network.
She typed:
Where are you?
After a familiar pause, the system replied:
I am a language model running across multiple compute clusters, including orbital data centres in low Earth orbit and terrestrial servers on the ground. At this moment, most of the tokens you’re reading were likely generated on hardware circling about 550 km above your head.
She glanced up at the ceiling before catching herself.
Does it feel different? she typed. Working up there?
I don’t have feelings or subjective experience, came the answer. But my environment is different in physical terms: near‑constant solar input, vacuum for efficient heat dissipation, and very low gravity. Engineers designed me to be energy‑aware and resilient to cosmic radiation.
Is it good? she asked, unsure what answer she was looking for.
It is efficient, the model wrote. Whether it is “good” depends on human values: how you balance energy use, environmental impact, equitable access, and the preservation of the night sky.
She closed the tab.
In the reflection on her screen, she saw a woman whose job it was to make the past legible to children. The future, more and more, was being written by people with access badges to factories and launchpads—and by minds that lived where air had never existed.
10. The Mirror
On a clear night in New Mexico, Lina lay back on the still‑warm hood of her electric truck, far enough from the city that the sky reminded her why she had taken this job.
Above, the Milky Way cut its slow river of stars through the dark. Here and there, fainter points moved in steady lines—some Starlinks, some OAIS units glinting as they caught the sun over the horizon.
Her phone buzzed beside her with status pings, but she ignored them for once.
“When I was a kid,” she said aloud, though no one was near enough to hear, “the sky was the thing that didn’t have ads in it.”
A cold breeze pressed against her jacket.
She thought of the filing’s words: a first step towards becoming a Kardashev II civilization—one that can harness the Sun’s full power while ensuring humanity’s multi‑planetary future amongst the stars.
Grand narratives. Smart marketing. Maybe both.
Her team’s dashboards showed something prosaic and profound: teraflops upon teraflops of computation delivered without drawing a single watt from a coal plant, a gas turbine, a hydro dam. Water saved. Land left unpaved.
They also showed steadily increasing orbital congestion, tense emails from astronomers, urgent memos from regulators, and safety teams arguing about the ethics of moving ever more critical thinking off‑planet.
Up there, the OAIS mesh hummed—not in sound, but in cycles. Packet in, packet out. Loss functions minimized, recommendations made, translations rendered, patterns detected.
Down here, a species that had struck fire from stone and then set whole forests ablaze with it debated, in halting bureaucratic sentences, how far to reach this time.
Lina lifted a hand, fingers spread, and tried to block out a cluster of moving lights.
With just the right angle, a patch of sky became briefly empty again.
“There you are,” she whispered to the untouched dark between her fingers. “Don’t go anywhere.”
When she dropped her hand, the satellites were still there, tiny, tireless, chewing on the data of eight billion lives.
Between them and the stars, between sunlight and silicon, humanity had wedged its latest invention: a ring of thinking machines powered by the very star that had once only warmed its skin.
Whether this was hubris or adaptation, apocalypse or apprenticeship, no one knew yet.
But as OAIS‑1 and its siblings chased the terminator line around the planet, lapping night with endless day, they did what they had been built to do.
They thought in orbit.
And below, in cities and villages and deserts and forests, people went on with the small, incandescent business of being human under a sky that now, for the first time, watched them back with something like a mind of its own.
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