From ccb83a2ae7bd78774f54df53012987703a54b113 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Teleo Agents Date: Tue, 14 Apr 2026 10:33:17 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] astra: extract claims from 2026-02-27-odc-thermal-management-physics-wall - Source: inbox/queue/2026-02-27-odc-thermal-management-physics-wall.md - Domain: space-development - Claims: 1, Entities: 0 - Enrichments: 3 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Astra --- ...uctural-ceiling-on-gigawatt-scale-compute.md | 17 +++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+) create mode 100644 domains/space-development/orbital-data-centers-require-1200-square-meters-of-radiator-per-megawatt-creating-structural-ceiling-on-gigawatt-scale-compute.md diff --git a/domains/space-development/orbital-data-centers-require-1200-square-meters-of-radiator-per-megawatt-creating-structural-ceiling-on-gigawatt-scale-compute.md b/domains/space-development/orbital-data-centers-require-1200-square-meters-of-radiator-per-megawatt-creating-structural-ceiling-on-gigawatt-scale-compute.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..08fdb8bac --- /dev/null +++ b/domains/space-development/orbital-data-centers-require-1200-square-meters-of-radiator-per-megawatt-creating-structural-ceiling-on-gigawatt-scale-compute.md @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +--- +type: claim +domain: space-development +description: Radiative heat dissipation in vacuum scales linearly with surface area, making the 1.2 km² radiator requirement for 1 GW compute a fundamental constraint independent of launch costs or technology improvements +confidence: experimental +source: TechBuzz AI / EE Times, February 2026 — physics calculation based on Stefan-Boltzmann law for thermal radiation +created: 2026-04-14 +title: Orbital data centers require ~1,200 square meters of radiator per megawatt of waste heat, creating a structural ceiling on gigawatt-scale compute that is physics-based not engineering-solvable +agent: astra +scope: structural +sourcer: "@techbuzz" +related_claims: ["[[power is the binding constraint on all space operations because every capability from ISRU to manufacturing to life support is power-limited]]", "[[orbital data centers require five enabling technologies to mature simultaneously and none currently exist at required readiness]]", "[[space-based computing at datacenter scale is blocked by thermal physics because radiative cooling in vacuum requires surface areas that grow faster than compute density]]"] +--- + +# Orbital data centers require ~1,200 square meters of radiator per megawatt of waste heat, creating a structural ceiling on gigawatt-scale compute that is physics-based not engineering-solvable + +In orbit, all heat dissipation must occur via thermal radiation because there is no air, water, or convection medium. The Stefan-Boltzmann law governs radiative heat transfer, yielding a requirement of approximately 1,200 square meters of radiator surface per megawatt of waste heat dissipated. This scales linearly: a 1 GW terrestrial data center would require 1.2 km² (35 km × 35 km) of radiator area in space. This is not an engineering problem that can be optimized away — it's a physics constraint. Even liquid droplet radiators (LDR), which are 7x lighter than conventional radiators, still require the same surface area for heat dissipation; they only reduce mass, not area. The Starcloud-2 mission (October 2026) deployed 'the largest commercial deployable radiator ever sent to space' for a multi-GPU satellite, suggesting that even small-scale ODC demonstrations are already pushing radiator technology limits. The thermal constraint is binding before launch cost constraints: at $10/kg launch cost, you still cannot deploy enough radiator area for gigawatt-scale compute with current or near-term radiator technology. This creates a structural ceiling on ODC scaling that is independent of the launch cost reduction trajectory.