# Project Sunrise **Type:** Orbital data center constellation **Operator:** Blue Origin **Status:** FCC filing submitted (March 19, 2026) **Scale:** Up to 51,600 satellites **Orbit:** Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), 500-1,800 km altitude **Architecture:** TeraWave optical inter-satellite links, Ka-band ground links **Timeline:** First 5,000+ satellites planned by end 2027; full deployment unlikely until 2030s ## Overview Project Sunrise is Blue Origin's proposed constellation of up to 51,600 data center satellites in sun-synchronous orbit. The constellation would use TeraWave optical inter-satellite links for high-throughput backbone communications and Ka-band for telemetry, tracking, and control. ## Technical Specifications - **Orbital planes:** 5-10 km apart in altitude - **Satellites per plane:** 300-1,000 - **Primary communications:** TeraWave optical ISL mesh - **Ground-to-space:** Ka-band TT&C - **Power:** Solar-powered ## Stated Rationale Blue Origin's filing states: "Project Sunrise will ease mounting pressure on US communities and natural resources by shifting energy- and water-intensive compute away from terrestrial data centres, reducing demand on land, water supplies and electrical grids." ## Context - Filed 7 weeks after SpaceX's 1M satellite ODC filing (January 30, 2026) - Represents ~22% of total LEO orbital capacity (~240,000 satellites) - Unlike SpaceX's 1M filing, Project Sunrise's 51,600 is within physical LEO capacity limits - SSO altitude (500-1800km) is a harsher radiation environment than Starcloud-1's 325km demonstration - No disclosed thermal management or radiation hardening approach in public filing ## Timeline - **2026-03-19** — FCC application filed for 51,600-satellite constellation - **2027** (planned) — First 5,000+ TeraWave satellites - **2030s** (projected) — Full deployment timeline per industry sources