teleo-codex/domains/space-development/orbital-data-center-microgravity-thermal-management-requires-novel-refrigeration-architecture-because-standard-systems-depend-on-gravity.md
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astra: extract claims from 2026-02-05-spacex-1m-satellite-odc-fcc-amazon-critique
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2026-04-14 10:32:15 +00:00

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claim space-development Microgravity eliminates natural convection and causes compressor lubricating oil to clog systems, making terrestrial data center cooling designs non-functional in orbit experimental Technical expert commentary, The Register, February 2026 2026-04-14 Orbital data center thermal management requires novel refrigeration architecture because standard cooling systems depend on gravity for fluid management and convection astra functional @theregister
orbital-data-center-thermal-management-is-scale-dependent-engineering-not-physics-constraint.md
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.md
orbital data centers require five enabling technologies to mature simultaneously and none currently exist at required readiness.md

Orbital data center thermal management requires novel refrigeration architecture because standard cooling systems depend on gravity for fluid management and convection

Technical experts identified a fundamental engineering constraint for orbital data centers that goes beyond radiative cooling surface area: standard refrigeration systems rely on gravity-dependent mechanisms. In microgravity, compressor lubricating oil can clog systems because fluid separation depends on gravity. Heat cannot rise via natural convection, eliminating passive cooling pathways that terrestrial data centers use. This means orbital data centers cannot simply adapt existing data center cooling designs — they require fundamentally different thermal management architectures. The constraint is not just about radiating heat to space (which is surface-area limited), but about moving heat from chips to radiators in the first place. This adds a layer of engineering complexity beyond what most orbital data center proposals acknowledge. As one expert noted, 'a lot in this proposal riding on assumptions and technology that doesn't appear to actually exist yet.' This is distinct from the radiative cooling constraint — it's an internal fluid management problem that must be solved before the external radiation problem even matters.