Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Satellite constellation company building real-time 3D Earth maps for AV and defense; In-Q-Tel backed with 2 demo satellites launched in 2024 competing with Capella Space and ICEYE.
Array Labs is a satellite imaging company building affordable synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and optical satellite constellations to create real-time, high-resolution 3D maps of Earth — providing persistent, high-cadence imaging coverage needed for autonomous vehicle mapping, defense intelligence, infrastructure monitoring, and change detection applications. Founded in 2022 in Palo Alto and backed by Y Combinator, Array Labs raised $5.6 million from investors including Seraphim Space and In-Q-Tel (CIA's venture arm), successfully launched two demonstration satellites in 2024, and secured a $1.25 million AFWERX contract with the US Air Force.\n\nArray Labs' technology approach uses small, affordable satellites flying in coordinated constellations to achieve revisit rates and imaging resolution that expensive single large satellites can't match cost-effectively. The 3D mapping output — accurate digital elevation models and change detection maps — is derived from interferometric radar techniques that can see through cloud cover and operate day and night, unlike optical satellites limited by weather and daylight. The defense and intelligence applications are significant given In-Q-Tel's backing, while the autonomous vehicle mapping use case targets AV companies needing HD maps that self-update as road conditions change.\n\nIn 2025, Array Labs competes in the commercial satellite imagery market with Planet Labs (daily optical imagery), Capella Space (SAR imagery), ICEYE (SAR with high revisit), and Umbra Space for high-resolution Earth observation. The market for real-time 3D mapping and change detection has grown as defense intelligence requirements, autonomous systems, and climate monitoring all need persistent Earth observation at economically viable prices. In-Q-Tel's backing provides access to US government contract opportunities. The 2025 strategy focuses on completing the demonstration satellite validation, raising growth capital for a larger constellation deployment, and building commercial contracts across defense and AV sectors.
Astranis is building the world's smallest geostationary communication satellites, providing dedicated broadband connectivity to underserved countries and island regions. HQ: San Francisco.
Astranis is a satellite internet company building the world's smallest geostationary (GEO) communication satellites — roughly the size of a washing machine at ~400kg, compared to traditional telecom satellites weighing 6,000kg+. Founded in 2015 by John Gedmark and Ryan McLinko, Astranis has developed a miniaturized satellite platform that dramatically reduces the cost and lead time of deploying dedicated broadband capacity to underserved regions. Its satellites are designed to provide dedicated broadband capacity — not shared like LEO constellation services (Starlink) — to island nations, remote regions, and underserved countries that lack terrestrial broadband infrastructure.
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