Starlink’s Architects Launch Eclipse to Open Megaconstellation Era

Starlink’s Architects Launch Eclipse to Open Megaconstellation Era

Eclipse Space, which made its public debut last week at the Space Capital Summit at Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City, announced its official launch as the first company focused exclusively on making megaconstellation ownership accessible to nations and enterprises worldwide. Founded by the most experienced megaconstellation team outside of SpaceX, Eclipse enables customers to deploy and operate sovereign satellite communications infrastructure that previously required the resources, expertise, and scale of the world’s largest constellation programs.

“We founded Eclipse on the belief that megaconstellation technology should not be the exclusive domain of trillion-dollar companies and centibillionaires,” said Derek Huerta, CEO and co-founder of Eclipse Space. “Until now, building a megaconstellation has required either enormous capital investment or dependence on someone else's infrastructure, with all the strategic vulnerability that comes with it. Eclipse was founded to change that by giving sovereign and commercial customers constellation infrastructure built to their requirements, operated on their terms, and aligned with their strategic interests.”

“Eclipse is one of the most exciting companies in space infrastructure today, with a bold vision and the unique capabilities to execute on it,” said Chad Anderson, CEO of Space Capital. “It is only fitting that the team that made Starlink the world's most successful satellite constellation is now applying that expertise to bring that capability to the rest of the world.” 

Most companies applying AI to engineering use it to help software teams write code. Eclipse is doing something different: building purpose-built AI tools for the deep-tech problem of designing spacecraft, where the advantage comes less from generic models than from infrastructure tailored to the engineering itself. To accelerate that work, Eclipse is launching with a strategic acquisition of the engineering team behind Rendered.ai’s Agent Studio, along with an exclusive license to develop the platform and an option to acquire its underlying technology. The deal brings a specialized AI engineering team in-house and pairs it with Eclipse’s satellite, electrical, mechanical, and RF engineers to build tools that take on the time-consuming work of designing, customizing, and optimizing large-scale space systems. By embedding AI directly into how it engineers spacecraft, Eclipse shortens design cycles and gains the flexibility to tailor a constellation to any mission or payload – laying the foundation for the next generation of space infrastructure, from communications constellations to future orbital data centers. Backed by investors including Space Capital, Tectonic Ventures and Ubiquity Ventures, Eclipse enters the market with significant nation-state and commercial traction:

  • Nation-State Market: Driven by surging demand for independent space communications infrastructure, Eclipse is in active engagement with customers across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.
  • Commercial Market: Eclipse is working with multiple commercial customers across telecom, connectivity, and satellite services on opportunities spanning constellation infrastructure and payload development, with first hardware deliveries targeted for later this year.
  • Integration Partnerships: Eclipse has established a global supply chain and is now building out regional integration partnerships for spacecraft-level integration that support in-country manufacturing requirements critical to sovereign customers and improve launch cadence and cost efficiency across programs.
  • First Launch: Eclipse's demonstration satellite is targeted for launch in 2027, validating the full technology stack ahead of customer constellation deployments.

Eclipse is to satellites what Apple is to smartphones: a fabless model that owns the architecture, design, and software stack while drawing on a global network of manufacturing and integration partners across North America, Europe, and Asia. The result is best-in-class design expertise and the agility to scale anywhere in the world, supporting a minimum production rate of five satellites per day. For nation-state customers, the model replicates regionally by standing up in-country production lines with local manufacturing partners and workforce for each customer constellation. Where traditional manufacturers sell hardware, Eclipse delivers space capability enablement: the ability for nations and enterprises to deploy, own, and operate world-class space infrastructure at a speed, scale, and level of flexibility that legacy providers cannot match.

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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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