USSF Col. Jason West (L) discusses the potential power and utility of AI for space domain awareness with PSAI Chief Technology Officer Aaron Sloman (R) during the company’s demonstration of its agentic technology.

This week, Planetary Systems AI demonstrated powerful new AI tools for identifying adversary spacecraft, analyzing their behavior, and helping U.S. Space Force (USSF) Guardians decide how to respond.

Our engineering team showed off this system of AI-orchestrated agents to USSF commanders and software integrators at Space Systems Command’s SDA TAP Lab in Colorado Springs at Demo Day for Cohort 7 of the Apollo Accelerator.

These tools are clustered around a new agentic artificial intelligence system that melds multiple data sources into a clear, realtime picture of spacecraft activity – not by merely categorizing maneuvers, but also by revealing them in geopolitical and historical context.

Simply put, PSAI’s system can identify sensitive points of interest or geopolitical threat that adversary spacecraft leverage for surveillance to provide insights and intelligence.

By building a record of these observation targets, our system can then spot similar maneuvers in future and identify when and where spacecraft might be looking earthward ahead of potential armed conflict or other coordinated orbital maneuvers.

The system is designed to dispatch a fleet of software agents that fetch, process, and analyze various data sources whenever the lab’s prototype battle management system – known as Welder’s Arc – detects an unexpected maneuver by an adversary’s spacecraft.

The agents:

  • identify the spacecraft’s capabilities from publicly-available information
  • calculate from its earth-facing camera specifications and orbit path what it might be able to see
  • fetch a list of likely observation targets in the view path, including:
    • lat/long data on sensitive installations such as dams, military bases, or power plants; or
    • news articles about current or recent geopolitical events 
  • suggest theories about the adversary’s intent – and recommend strategies for allied response

The system is meant to function as a sort of co-pilot for U.S. Space Force operators, who can modify the agents’ behavior to investigate other facets of each maneuver and then validate or correct the system’s recommendations which trains the prediction model to constantly improve its performance. And it can transform the sequential behavior of Welder’s Arc’s dozens of analytical applications into a living, responsive system for identifying, predicting, and responding to hidden, unknown, and hostile activity by adversary spacecraft.

Architecture like this can be configured to address many more space-domain awareness problems that require swift and complex analysis of multiple varied data sources to feed rapid decision recommendations to USSF Guardians – shortening analytical processes that often take hours and sometimes days, and reducing the risk of operational surprise.

In another demonstration, we showed how our AI agents can monitor news sources for indications of pre-launch activities and launch of satellites by U.S. adversaries.

This news-analysis agent is connected to our existing capability-analysis tool, which aggregates publicly-available information from many sources into specification profiles of just-launched satellites. This lets us link launch events to specific satellites before they enter orbit, and can help reduce the workload on other systems that labor to associate uncorrelated satellite tracks after launch to specific vehicles.

The team also demonstrated an expansion of our computer vision model for identifying satellite capabilities from orbital images and clean-room photos.

We are working to overcome a significant challenge to using AI to identify adversary spacecraft: Very few images of spacecraft exist that can be used to train computer-vision systems. Instead, we have begun training our system on synthetic visual data provided by a major defense industry partner within the lab. This allows us to train the model on thousands of synthetic satellite images for better accuracy, where only a few dozen publicly-available photographs of orbiting satellites exist.

Our work is timely: In an effort to keep the U.S. competitive in the global space industry, the White House this week issued an executive order meant to reform contract regulations and streamline the review process for space companies vying for federal business. At its core:

It is the policy of the United States to enhance American greatness in space by enabling a competitive launch marketplace and substantially increasing commercial space launch cadence and novel space activities by 2030.  To accomplish this, the Federal Government will streamline commercial license and permit approvals for United States-based operators.

During remarks at the start of Demo Day, USSF Colonel Jason West confirmed this new direction, saying that the Space Force is working to overhaul the existing defense-contracting environment – which usually sees software developed at a slow and deliberate pace by a limited number of major contractors – with a more agile process that will favor fast-moving innovation from smaller companies.

With our success at the SDA TAP Lab and our growing number of small and large space- and defense-industry partners, PSAI sits in a great position to ride this next wave of innovation.   We welcome the change, and look forward to what comes next.

Watch this space.

The White House recently released America’s AI Action Plan – a bold roadmap to secure global AI dominance for the United States. At Planetary Systems AI, we have already been executing on it since Day 1 of our founding. 

Cover page, The White House America’s AI Action Plan released July 23, 2025

First and foremost, the plan calls for establishing an “AI & Autonomous Systems Virtual Proving Ground at DOD” to scope technical, geographic, security, and resourcing requirements for next-generation government and AI capabilities at the U.S. Department of Defense. Space is now a warfighting domain and space superiority is a priority in the United States’ position for Assured Access to Space for all.

Here’s how PSAI is delivering on America’s AI vision:

  • Automation Systems at Scale –  Our proprietary spacecraft-capability assessment models operate as a distributed AI proving ground, testing autonomous maneuver alerts, threat detection, and mission-critical decision-making 24/7 for space operations.
  • Defense-Ready Technology – We are building secure, robust AI systems that the Department of Defense needs at unclassified levels—systems that can operate independently in contested environments with zero ground control that are proven and tested
  • American Innovation –  100% U.S.-developed AI architecture designed with national security priorities from the ground up
  • Rapid Adoption – Leveraging AI tools such as LLM’s and generative AI capabilities in innovative ways for in areas such as space domain awareness and space situation awareness are breeding grounds for new use cases and applications, particularly in next-gen AI agentic systems and computing power.
  • International Cooperation – With allied partners in countries like Australia, South Korea, United Kingdom and in the European Union, coordinated commercial capabilities being operationalized in test environments are piloted with government partners.

The plan emphasizes America must “harness the full power of American innovation” to maintain “unquestioned and unchallenged global technological dominance.” That’s exactly what we are doing – turning mastery of space into America’s ultimate AI advantage.

For Defense Partners: Our orbital AI system is ready to support your mission-critical operations today, not years from now.

For Investors: This isn’t just policy alignment – it’s market validation. PSAI is positioned at the intersection of America’s highest strategic priorities: AI dominance and space superiority.

The future of American AI leadership isn’t just about what we build on Earth. It’s about extending that leadership to the ultimate high ground and frontier: space. 

Watch this space.

🔗 Read the full AI Action Plan: https://www.whitehouse.gov/articles/2025/07/white-house-unveils-americas-ai-action-plan/

 

About Planetary Systems AI (www.planetarysystems.ai): PSAI is a planetary support company accelerating data flow and insight generation for decision-making in the space sector, optimizing planetary support operations.

Planetary Systems AI Press Contact:

Mack Reed
Head of Product
E: pr@planetarysystems.ai

Planetary Systems AI Awarded Second Annual License Subscription by U.S. Space Systems Command’s Space Domain Awareness (SDA) TAP Lab 

From the period of 5 February through 29 April 2025, Planetary Systems AI successfully demonstrated the ability to use generative AI to read large quantities of semi/unstructured text and imagery to populate the Lab’s Target Model Database (TMDB). 

PSAI Awarded Annal 12-Month Subscription License

New York, NY, May 12, 2024Planetary Systems AI (PSAI), a dual-use space and defense tech company accelerating data flow and insight generation for decision-making in the space sector to optimize planetary support operations, announced today that it has been awarded a second annual subscription license by U.S. Space Systems Command’s Space Domain Awareness (SDA) Tools Applications and Processing (TAP) Lab after the completion of the Apollo Accelerator Cohort 6. This program enabled PSAI to demonstrate its capabilities for image-to-text object classification combined with the use of PSAI’s initial subscription license to the SDA TAP Lab – an application using generative AI to read large quantities of semi/unstructured text and imagery to populate the Lab’s Target Model Database (TMDB). The TMDB, once populated with details about a satellite’s payloads, power, and propulsion systems can be used to evaluate potentially threatening close approaches and automated alert system for the Welder’s Arc battle management system. 

“Welder’s Arc is a fully automated, multi-vendor, prototype space threat warning system building partnerships with industry, academia, government, partners, and allies (IAGPA) in the SDA TAP Lab. There have been over 100 companies that have participated in Apollo Accelerator from almost a dozen countries totaling several hundred individuals. Retention is fairly high. We are changing commercial SDA market forces for the better to ensure long term viability of the small business base.” – SDA TAP Lab Chief, Major Sean Allen on the vision of the Apollo Accelerator.

“PSAI is leveraging our multi-modal AI expertise and capabilities to work with the U.S. government, its allies, and our commercial partners to ensure that automated decision support subsystems are accelerated and enhanced through our AI solutions,” said CEO & Chief Space Officer Cindy Chin. “Our CTO Aaron Sloman and Mack Reed on behalf of the team were excited to showcase computer vision experience in an image-to-text capability during the SDA TAP Lab Cohort 6 Demo Day with U.S. Space Systems Command, the U.S. Space Force, U.S. Space Command and other government and industry partners.” 

PSAI will continue to increase space vehicle imagery to its AI model and agentic AI capabilities in its architecture, responding to maneuver alerts in a given scenario related to threat warning and assessment. The current database is structured for direct integration with, query by, and display in SDA tools. PSAI’s APIs and applications can be used with maneuver-event data for inferring potential for threats and determining proximity. Entries were filtered for validity by an AI model trained on Joint Commercial Operations (JCO) Notice to Space Operators records and other trusted analytic sources.

About SDA TAP Lab (https://sdataplab.org/): The Space Domain Awareness TAP Lab accelerates the delivery of space battle management software to operational units. We decompose kill chains, prioritize needs with operators, map needs to technologies, and onboard tech to existing platforms quickly. We partner with industry, academia, and across the government to succeed. 

About Planetary Systems AI (www.planetarysystems.ai): PSAI is a planetary support company accelerating data flow and insight generation for decision-making in the space sector, optimizing planetary support operations.

Planetary Systems AI Press Contact:

Mack Reed
Head of Product
E: pr@planetarysystems.ai

Download a PDF of this Press Release

an officer in camouflage fatigues addresses an audience from a podium, standing before an orange wall and a display monitor
U.S. Space Force Col. Gina Peterson addresses the audience at the SDA TAP Lab’s Demo Day on Jan. 30, 2025

Space domain awareness (SDA)  – and all the data that must flow to support it – no longer hovers in a theoretical future.  

Today, spacecraft operators must know swiftly and reliably what space trash, errant satellite, or hostile might threaten their operations – and the discipline is crying out for investment.

For the well-equipped U.S. military, better SDA tools are under development as a complex and powerful orbital-defense system at the United States Space Force’s SDA TAP Lab. That’s where we have been collaborating these past six months with dozens of other companies. 

In the Lab’s Cohort 5, Planetary Systems AI finished building AI tools that help U.S. Space Force Guardians identify the launch history, onboard sensors, and jamming frequencies of space vehicles that are hidden, unknown, or potential threats. 

As we accelerate into Cohort 6 next week, one thing has become very clear: This vital project – and indeed SDA overall – needs a huge boost in operating budget to keep pace with the space boom.

With more companies and international partners joining the SDA TAP (Tools, Applications & Processing) Lab, more payloads and satellites reaching orbit, and the increasing risk of collision with debris and each other impacting critical communications and cybersecurity infrastructure on the ground, it will be difficult to keep up with the pace of innovation such as the SDA TAP Lab’s rapidly-expanding work without more Congressional and the Pentagon’s monetary support or capital investment from the satellite and telecommunications industry to protect their in-orbit assets. 

 

a group of technologists and researchers assemble for a group photo
Cohort 5 of the SDA TAP Lab’s Apollo Accelerator project

The SDA TAP Lab needs a significantly bigger budget to support its complex logistics, the cohort’s rising headcount, and a newly-available, multi-terabyte source of SDA data that must be imported, sorted, and made available to us and international partners to continue the work. 

The need will be even greater for the commercial sector, where spacecraft operators work with SDA discipline in mind but without universally-available tools at hand.

While the Lab is building tools to sharpen the U.S. Space Force’s awareness and improve the timeliness and accuracy of the Guardians’ response, those military tools won’t be available to civilians. 

 

 

an executive stands before an array of display monitors talking with a uniformed U.S. Space Force general
PSAI CEO Cindy Chin and Aquarious Workman present to Lt. General Douglas A. Schiess during the Demo Day on Jan. 30, 2025 at the SDA TAP Lab

 

For commercial launch and orbital companies, U.S. Guardians are tasked with issuing notifications to space operators. These email advisories advise U.S. allies and corporations who subscribes to them whenever a rocket launch is detected or an orbiting spacecraft makes a maneuver. 

But the notifications don’t deliver operational context; While Guardians have access to multiple SDA data sources, sensors, satellites and other tools to support their defense-oriented mission (and will soon have the TAP Lab’s defense system as well), no such service exists to warn and protect the commercial sector against orbital mishaps. 

It is up to launch and orbital companies to blend orbital data sources with whatever in-house SDA experience they might have to keep their spacecraft and space assets safe. Therefore, more capital investment in this critical infrastructure is needed in and adjacent to orbit before calamity happens.

 

 

A slide depicting the benefits of delivering satellite capability data to USSF warfighters
A slide from PSAI’s presentation to the SDA TAP Lab explaining the benefit our work has brought to the U.S. Space Force’s battle management system

Just as Planetary Systems AI is bringing deep experience in artificial intelligence, machine learning and data fusion to SDA for the U.S. Space Force, we plan to deliver SDA solutions for our partners in the commercial sector and their space strategies

Watch this space.

Contact: Mack Reed, Head of Product, mack@planetarysystems.ai

Planetary Systems AI Awarded by U.S. Space Systems Command’s Space Domain Awareness (SDA) TAP Lab An Annual License Subscription

From the period of 6 August through 29 October 2024, Planetary Systems AI successfully demonstrated the ability to use generative AI to read large quantities of semi/unstructured text and imagery to populate the Lab’s Target Model Database (TMDB). 

New York, NY, November 19, 2024Planetary Systems AI (PSAI), a planetary support company providing cyber-first artificial intelligence and machine-learning solutions for space and satellite operations, announced today that it has been awarded an annual subscription license by U.S. Space Systems Command’s Space Domain Awareness (SDA) Tools Applications and Processing (TAP) Lab after the completion of the Apollo Accelerator Cohort 4. This program enabled PSAI to demonstrate its capabilities with the use of generative AI to read large quantities of semi/unstructured text and imagery to populate the Lab’s Target Model Database (TMDB). The TMDB, once populated with details about a satellite’s payloads, power, and propulsion systems can be used to evaluate potentially threatening close approaches.

“With the amount of orbital traffic and payloads being deployed into space, it is imperative that a continuous monitoring and coverage of space assets traffic and anomaly management occurs 24/7/365.” said CEO & Chief Space Officer Cindy Chin. “PSAI is leveraging our multi-modal AI expertise and capabilities to work with the U.S. government, its allies, and our commercial partners to ensure that their decision support is accelerated and enhanced through our AI solutions. Our team was excited to showcase these tools and capabilities during the SDA TAP Lab Cohort 4 Demo Day with U.S. Space Systems Command, the U.S. Space Force, DARPA, and other government and industry partners.” 

SDA TAP Lab Chief, Major Sean Allen says, “This is a real innovation applying modern software to age-old problems and a great use-case for generative AI.” 

During the three-month TAP Lab cycle in Cohort 5, PSAI will further test and refine its solutions for SDA by increasing space vehicle imagery to its AI model, responding with a team in a given scenario related to threat warning and assessment. The current database is structured for direct integration with, query by, and display in SDA tools. It can be used with maneuver-event data for inferring potential for threats and determining proximity. Entries were filtered for validity by an AI model trained on Joint Commercial Operations (JCO) Notice to Space Operators records and other trusted analytic sources.

About SDA TAP Lab (https://sdataplab.org/): The Space Domain Awareness TAP Lab accelerates the delivery of space battle management software to operational units. We decompose kill chains, prioritize needs with operators, map needs to technologies, and onboard tech to existing platforms quickly. We partner with industry, academia, and across the government to succeed. 

About Planetary Systems AI (www.planetarysystems.ai): PSAI is a planetary support company accelerating data flow and insight generation for decision-making in the space sector, optimizing planetary support operations.

 

Planetary Systems AI Press Contact:
Mack Reed
Head of Product
E: pr@planetarysystems.ai

Download a PDF of this Press Release

 

Aquarious Workman, CISM, Head of Cybersecurity for Planetary Systems AI, demonstrates the company’s AI service for U.S. Space Force

Colorado Springs, CO. – The Planetary Systems AI team capped three months of intensive multidisciplinary work this week with a demonstration of the company’s capabilities in AI-driven data management for space domain awareness (SDA) at the U.S. Space Force’s SDA TAP Lab

By aggregating more than 2.3 million open-source records on satellites owned by U.S. and foreign entities, the team was able to build out a body of knowledge that will help the Space Force spot and defend military, government, and commercial spacecraft against hostile actions by other countries in space.

Aquarious Workman, PSAI’s Head of Cybersecurity, presented the demo to an audience of investors and U.S. Department of Defense officials, surrounded by nearly 60 companies, many of whom the company had collaborated with closely during Demo Day for Cohort 4 of the Lab’s Apollo Accelerator program.

The company will be continuing its work at the SDA TAP Lab into Cohort 5, which kicks off Nov. 5 and runs until late January.