China Activates First Orbital Supercomputer with AI-Powered Satellite Network
- China launched 12 satellites using a Long March-2D rocket from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on a Wednesday to start the Three-Body Computing Constellation.
- The launch follows Zhejiang Lab and partners’ goal to build a large-scale orbiting supercomputer network addressing inefficiencies in traditional satellite data processing.
- Each satellite runs an 8-billion parameter AI model with 744 tera operations per second and communicates via 100 Gbps laser links in a network planned for 2,800 satellites.
- The constellation provides 5 peta operations per second now, aims for 1,000 POPS, supports real-time in-orbit data processing, and enables experimental missions like astronomy observations.
- This project highlights China’s ambition to extend space-based computing power, with implications for energy efficiency and a new frontier for AI and cloud infrastructure.
104 Articles
104 Articles
China has recently sent 12 such satellites into space which will work like supercomputers equipped with Artificial Intelligence, i.e. AI. China has started a big plan through these 12 satellites, its aim is to create a huge network of total 2800 satellites, which has been named Three-Body Computing Constellation. Know the details.
Madrid. China launched a Long March-2D rocket, sending 12 satellites into orbit as the first batch of the “Computer constellation of the three bodies”, the nucleus for a supercomputer in orbit assisted by artificial intelligence (AI).
China launched a first group of satellites within a project aimed at expanding the orbit of a supercomputer constellation for artificial intelligence (AI), transmitted Live Science and Agerpres.
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