Starcloud, a Washington-based startup backed by Nvidia, has trained an artificial intelligence model in space for the first time. The company launched its Starcloud-1 satellite in early November 2025 equipped with an Nvidia H100 graphics processing unit.
The chip is 100 times more powerful than any GPU previously sent to space. The satellite is now running Google’s Gemma, an open large language model, in orbit.
This marks the first time an LLM has operated on a high-powered Nvidia GPU in outer space. The model sent a message to Earth saying “Greetings, Earthlings” and describing itself as ready to observe and analyze from its orbital position.
Starcloud also trained NanoGPT, an AI model created by OpenAI founding member Andrej Karpathy, on the H100 chip. The company used the complete works of Shakespeare for training, which resulted in the model speaking in Shakespearean English.
CEO Philip Johnston said the company wants to prove that space can host data centers. Earth-based facilities strain power grids and consume billions of gallons of water annually while producing greenhouse gas emissions.
The electricity consumption of data centers is projected to more than double by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency. Johnston said Starcloud’s orbital data centers will have 10 times lower energy costs than terrestrial facilities.
The satellite can answer queries about its location and status. It can identify its position over Africa and predict when it will be over the Middle East in 20 minutes.
Starcloud plans to build a 5-gigawatt orbital data center with solar and cooling panels measuring roughly 4 kilometers in both width and height. The facility would capture constant solar energy, unaffected by Earth’s day and night cycles or weather.
The company is working on customer projects using satellite imagery from Capella Space. These systems could spot lifeboats from capsized vessels and detect forest fires at the moment they ignite.
Johnston said the satellites could enable real-time intelligence and immediately alert first responders. The company integrated the satellite’s telemetry so users can ask about its vital signs like altitude and speed.
Starcloud’s satellites are expected to have a five-year lifespan based on the Nvidia chips’ expected lifetime. The company plans its next launch for October 2026 with several Nvidia H100 chips and Nvidia’s Blackwell platform.
Other companies have announced similar projects. Google unveiled Project Suncatcher on November 4, which aims to put solar-powered satellites into space with Google’s tensor processing units.
Lonestar Data Holdings is working to put a commercial lunar data center on the moon’s surface. Aetherflux announced plans to deploy an orbital data center satellite in the first quarter of 2027.
Morgan Stanley analysts noted that orbital data centers could face challenges including harsh radiation, difficulty of maintenance, debris hazards, and regulatory issues. Despite these risks, tech giants are pursuing the technology for access to solar energy and larger operations in space.
The next Starcloud satellite will include a module running a cloud platform from Crusoe, allowing customers to deploy AI workloads from space.
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