Project Suncatcher

Project Suncatcher

  • Project Suncatcher envisions solar-powered satellites hosting AI data centres in space to reduce Earth’s energy and water consumption used for cooling terrestrial facilities. 
  • These orbiting data centres will use free-space optical links to transfer data at speeds of tens of terabits per second, forming a distributed network similar to satellite internet constellations like Starlink
  • Google plans to launch two prototype satellites by early 2027 to test its space-based TPU (Tensor Processing Unit) hardware. 
  • Rationale for Space-Based AI Centres:
    • AI data centres consume enormous electricity and water for cooling — a growing environmental concern as AI adoption increases globally. 
    • In spacesolar panels are up to 8 times more efficient than on Earth, providing a continuous and clean energy supply. 
  • How It Works:
    • The satellites will rely on solar energy and optical data transmission to function as a cohesive high-performance computing network. 
    • TPUs (Trillium v6e) are being tested for radiation resistance and performance in extreme conditions. 

Key features:

  • Solar-Powered Satellite Constellation: Uses solar panels up to 8 times more efficient in orbit than on Earth.
  • Orbiting TPUs: AI accelerators (Trillium v6e) tested under radiation for space durability.
  • High-Speed Optical Links: Free-space optical communication capable of tens of terabits per second, connecting satellite nodes.
  • Prototype Launch: Two test satellites planned for early 2027 to validate hardware and communication systems.
  • Scalability: Analytical models suggest satellites can operate just hundreds of meters apart, allowing clustered space-based data hubs.
  • Future Cost Efficiency: By mid-2030s, falling launch costs (as low as $200/kg) could make orbital data centres economically viable.