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NASA’s Artemis II Mission Sparks Race for Space Data Centers

NASA’s Artemis II Mission Sparks Race for Space Data Centers

Published:
2026-01-17 13:50:36
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Space data centers in view as NASA plans Artemis II mission

Forget terrestrial cloud servers—the next data frontier is orbital. As NASA finalizes crew assignments for the 2026 Artemis II lunar flyby, a silent scramble begins among tech giants and startups alike. The mission isn't just about footprints; it's about laying fiber-optic cables in the cosmos.

The Low-Orbit Advantage

Latency drops to milliseconds when your server farm bypasses the atmosphere. Processing satellite imagery, managing deep-space comms, even hosting blockchain nodes—operations that demand speed now look skyward. Early renderings show modular, self-cooling units that hitch rides on commercial lunar transports.

Who's Building the First Star-Server?

Private aerospace firms are already retrofitting cargo designs. The pitch? A data center that never experiences a power outage, natural disaster, or pesky regulatory inspection. One venture capitalist quipped, 'It's the ultimate off-shore tax haven—literally off-planet.'

The Cosmic Bottom Line

Launch costs remain astronomical, but so does the potential ROI. Analysts project the first profitable extraterrestrial data transaction by 2032. Until then, it's a capital-intensive race where the only thing heavier than the hardware is the speculation. After all, what's another bubble when it's literally in the vacuum of space?

NASA begins pad tests as Congress fights over cost

Once the rocket got to the pad, NASA crews started setting up. They began connecting ground equipment, testing hardware, and checking everything on-site. They’re working toward the next big milestone: a full countdown rehearsal at the end of January.

That’s when they fuel up the rocket and run through all the final steps leading up to launch. Nothing moves forward until that test passes.

“Wet dress is the big test at the pad. That’s the one to keep an eye on,” said Charlie, the launch director.

The actual launch is now scheduled for April. It was originally planned for late 2024, but delays pushed it. The Artemis II mission will send the crew around the moon, then bring them home within ten days. It’s the first human flight of the SLS. The next flight (Artemis III) will put astronauts back on the moon. That one is expected in 2027.

The money behind this is just as insane. Donald Trump’s budget for this year wanted to phase out the SLS after its third flight. He called it “grossly expensive and delayed.”

But Ted Cruz stepped in and got $4.1 billion added back through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which TRUMP signed in July.

Bezos and Musk eye moon orbit for new data center push

While the rocket rollout is happening, Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are already thinking a few steps ahead. Both of them are working on designs for space-based data centers.

These WOULD orbit the moon and run off the cold of space instead of overloading Earth’s power grid. These types of data centers eat electricity like crazy, and keeping them cool is expensive. Sticking them in space makes it easier to manage all that heat.

“These are the kind of days we live for,” said John, who leads the Artemis II mission team.

NASA says the countdown will continue through all of January. Teams will do one last sweep before the final rehearsal. If nothing breaks, they’ll launch by spring. And if that works, the moon becomes the next big tech zone.

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