Aalyria Raises $100 Million for Communications Backbone of the New Space Age

Aalyria Raises $100 Million for Communications Backbone of the New Space Age

Aalyria, an advanced aerospace communications company whose products are critical to the next generation of space-based communications systems, announced the closing of its $100 million Series B financing, valuing the company at $1.3 billion. The round was led by Battery Ventures and J2 Ventures, with participation from DYNE and other investors.

The new funding will accelerate Aalyria’s mission to make resilient, high-throughput networks in motion practical at global scale. It will expand deployment of Spacetime, a managed platform that orchestrates and continually optimizes directional networks in real time as assets move and conditions change, and Tightbeam, Aalyria’s proven ultra-high-speed laser communications terminals that deliver secure, high-capacity links through the atmosphere. Together, Spacetime and Tightbeam transform land, sea, air, and space systems from isolated point-to-point links into adaptive, coordinated networks of networks.

CEO Chris Taylor, CTO Brian Barritt, and others founded Aalyria in 2021 through the acquisition of two breakthrough inventions developed with over a decade of research from Google and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

"We started Aalyria to build what space has been missing: a true communications and networking layer that scales with human and market demand," said Taylor. "Every major infrastructure shift - from railroads to telecommunications to the internet - required a control plane that could coordinate complexity at scale. Space is no different - nor are the varied businesses and missions that space serves. This funding accelerates our path to becoming that ubiquitous control plane: the digital cartilage that connects thousands of independent satellites, aircraft, ships, fiber, and ground stations into a single, intelligent network that can route around failures, optimize for mission priorities, and adapt in real-time. We're not just connecting space systems - we're making space infrastructure as reliable and programmable as the Internet itself.”

Aalyria enables commercial and government customers to operate resilient, high-throughput networks in motion. Unlike wireless networks that broadcast widely, aerospace and defense networks are increasingly relying on narrow, directional wireless beams to deliver data faster, farther, and more securely by focusing the energy on only intended receivers. But moving vehicles, changing weather, and terrain blockages can constantly disrupt high-throughput, directional links. Aalyria’s technologies solve these complexities and are widely viewed as essential for the emerging space economy.

“Aalyria has built an extremely important platform at the intersection of advanced networking, AI-driven orchestration, and national security,” said Michael Brown, General Partner at Battery Ventures and incoming board member at Aalyria. “The team’s ability to deliver resilient, software-defined connectivity across complex environments positions the company to play a foundational role in next-generation communications architectures.”

Aalyria’s technology is already being deployed in support of flagship commercial satellite programs, including next-generation Low Earth Orbit constellations, as well as missions for the U.S. Government and allied partners. The company’s platforms are designed to operate seamlessly across multiple orbital regimes and mission types, enabling coordination between satellites, ground stations, airborne assets, and terrestrial networks.

“Aalyria’s orchestration and network-optimization technologies are a key performance and resiliency enabler for our Telesat Lightspeed architecture,” said Dan Goldberg, President and CEO of Telesat. “Spacetime’s dynamic routing, spectrum-aware resource management, and advanced link prediction capabilities will be integrated with our system design, strengthening end-to-end service delivery across our global LEO network.”

In just a few years, Aalyria has established itself as a critical partner across the global space ecosystem, announcing strategic collaborations and deployments with leading commercial and government organizations. The company has partnered with Telesat, Google Public Sector, NASA, Airbus, ALL.SPACE, Keysight Technologies, Logos Space, the European Space Agency, and military services and field activities in the U.S. Government, supporting next-generation connectivity, space domain awareness initiatives, and mission-critical communications programs.

"We're at an inflection point where the world is increasingly connected in space: tens of thousands of satellites are launching, data volumes are exploding, and traditional point-to-point links can't keep up," said Alex Harstrick, Managing Partner at J2 Ventures. "Aalyria has cracked the code on network orchestration at scale, treating space systems as intelligent, coordinated networks rather than isolated assets. The combination of Spacetime's software intelligence and Tightbeam's throughput positions Aalyria as essential infrastructure for the next generation of space communications."

Aalyria is headquartered in Livermore, California, with offices in Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, and London.

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GNSS Constellations - A list of all GNSS satellites by constellations

beidou

Satellite NameOrbit Date
BeiDou-3 G4Geostationary Orbit (GEO)17 May, 2023
BeiDou-3 G2Geostationary Orbit (GEO)09 Mar, 2020
Compass-IGSO7Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)09 Feb, 2020
BeiDou-3 M19Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M20Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M21Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M22Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 I3Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M23Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019
BeiDou-3 M24Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019

galileo

Satellite NameOrbit Date
GSAT0223MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0224MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0219MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0220MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0221MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0222MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0215MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0216MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0217MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0218MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017

glonass

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Kosmos 2569--07 Aug, 2023
Kosmos 2564--28 Nov, 2022
Kosmos 2559--10 Oct, 2022
Kosmos 2557--07 Jul, 2022
Kosmos 2547--25 Oct, 2020
Kosmos 2545--16 Mar, 2020
Kosmos 2544--11 Dec, 2019
Kosmos 2534--27 May, 2019
Kosmos 2529--03 Nov, 2018
Kosmos 2527--16 Jun, 2018

gps

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Navstar 82Medium Earth Orbit19 Jan, 2023
Navstar 81Medium Earth Orbit17 Jun, 2021
Navstar 78Medium Earth Orbit22 Aug, 2019
Navstar 77Medium Earth Orbit23 Dec, 2018
Navstar 76Medium Earth Orbit05 Feb, 2016
Navstar 75Medium Earth Orbit31 Oct, 2015
Navstar 74Medium Earth Orbit15 Jul, 2015
Navstar 73Medium Earth Orbit25 Mar, 2015
Navstar 72Medium Earth Orbit29 Oct, 2014
Navstar 71Medium Earth Orbit02 Aug, 2014

irnss

Satellite NameOrbit Date
NVS-01Geostationary Orbit (GEO)29 May, 2023
IRNSS-1IInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)12 Apr, 2018
IRNSS-1HSub Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (Sub-GTO)31 Aug, 2017
IRNSS-1GGeostationary Orbit (GEO)28 Apr, 2016
IRNSS-1FGeostationary Orbit (GEO)10 Mar, 2016
IRNSS-1EGeosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)20 Jan, 2016
IRNSS-1DInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)28 Mar, 2015
IRNSS-1CGeostationary Orbit (GEO)16 Oct, 2014
IRNSS-1BInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Apr, 2014
IRNSS-1AInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)01 Jul, 2013
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