Designing Dense Satellite Clusters for Distributed Space-based Datacenters
Jules P\'enot, Hamsa Balakrishnan

TL;DR
This paper designs dense satellite clusters in Low Earth Orbit for space-based datacenters, optimizing orbital geometry to meet operational constraints and maximize satellite scalability and inter-satellite links.
Contribution
It introduces two novel orbital cluster designs, a planar and a 3D architecture, with the 3D design enabling proportional scaling of satellites.
Findings
Both designs satisfy safety and operational constraints.
The 3D architecture allows satellite count to scale as (R_max/R_min)^3.
Feasible inter-satellite links can replicate terrestrial datacenter switching fabrics.
Abstract
Recent proposals for datacenters in sun-synchronous Low Earth Orbit rely on a large number of compute satellites formation-flying in dense clusters. Designing such satellite clusters requires optimizing the satellites' orbital geometry under several safety and operational constraints applied throughout the cluster's entire orbit. These constraints include guaranteeing a minimum inter-satellite spacing, obstruction-less solar power for every satellite, and that each satellite have a stable set of nearest neighbors with which it can maintain inter-satellite links (ISLs). In this work, we propose two main cluster orbital designs, parametrized by the minimum inter-satellite spacing and the cluster radius : a planar cluster, and a 3D cluster. We show by construction and numerical analysis that both cluster orbital designs are consistent with the inter-satellite spacing,…
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