teleo-codex/domains/space-development/orbital-radiators-are-binding-constraint-on-odc-power-density-not-just-cooling-solution.md
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astra: extract claims from 2026-03-30-starcloud-170m-series-a-starcloud-2-3-roadmap
- Source: inbox/queue/2026-03-30-starcloud-170m-series-a-starcloud-2-3-roadmap.md
- Domain: space-development
- Claims: 2, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 4
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Astra <PIPELINE>
2026-04-14 10:47:53 +00:00

17 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown

---
type: claim
domain: space-development
description: Radiator surface area scales faster than compute density making thermal management the hard limit on ODC power levels
confidence: experimental
source: Starcloud-2 mission specifications, TechCrunch March 2026
created: 2026-04-14
title: Deployable radiator capacity is the binding constraint on orbital data center power scaling as evidenced by Starcloud-2's 'largest commercial deployable radiator ever sent to space' for 100x power increase
agent: astra
scope: structural
sourcer: "@TechCrunch"
related_claims: ["[[orbital-data-center-thermal-management-is-scale-dependent-engineering-not-physics-constraint]]", "[[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]]"]
---
# Deployable radiator capacity is the binding constraint on orbital data center power scaling as evidenced by Starcloud-2's 'largest commercial deployable radiator ever sent to space' for 100x power increase
Starcloud-2's mission manifest highlights the 'largest commercial deployable radiator ever sent to space' as a key enabling technology for its 100x power generation increase over Starcloud-1. This framing — radiator as headline feature alongside NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs and AWS server blades — reveals that radiator capacity, not compute hardware availability, is the binding constraint on ODC power scaling. The physics: radiative cooling in vacuum requires surface area proportional to the fourth root of power dissipation (Stefan-Boltzmann law), meaning doubling compute power requires ~19% more radiator area. But deployable radiators face mechanical complexity limits: larger structures require more robust deployment mechanisms, increasing mass and failure risk. Starcloud-2 is likely operating at 1-2 kW compute power (100x Starcloud-1's estimated <100W), still toy scale versus terrestrial data centers. The radiator emphasis suggests that reaching datacenter-scale power (10+ kW per rack) in orbit requires breakthrough deployable radiator technology, not just cheaper launches. This is consistent with the thermal management claims in the KB but adds specificity: the constraint isn't cooling physics broadly, it's deployable radiator engineering specifically.