
In an effort to streamline satellite mission management, Antaris and Infostellar announced a strategic partnership on Wednesday, January 21, 2026, to integrate cloud-native ground services directly into an AI-powered mission planning platform.
The collaboration aims to unify fragmented satellite operations by connecting Infostellar’s global ground station network with the Antaris software-defined satellite ecosystem.
Technical Integration of GSaaS and AI Orchestration
The integration leverages Antaris’ cloud-based platform, which utilizes digital twins and software-defined architectures to simulate and manage satellite missions from design through end-of-life. By incorporating Infostellar’s StellarStation, a Ground Segment as a Service (GSaaS) provider, operators can now automate the scheduling and execution of ground station passes directly within the Antaris interface. This eliminates the manual coordination typically required between satellite operators and multiple ground station providers. The system architecture supports high-frequency data downlinks and low-latency command uplinks, enabling real-time adjustments to mission parameters based on onboard telemetry or external triggers.
Addressing Fragmentation in Satellite Ground Segments
The partnership addresses a critical bottleneck in the commercial space sector where ground segment operations often lag behind the rapid deployment of new satellite constellations. Infostellar has established itself as a key player in the Japanese and international markets, having previously secured funding to expand its global ground station network to support various frequency bands including X, S, and Ka-band. By linking this hardware-diverse network to the Antaris software stack, the companies provide a scalable path for constellation owners who require global coverage without the capital expenditure of building proprietary ground infrastructure.
Roadmap for Unified Mission Operations
The combined solution is currently undergoing final validation with initial pilot customers who are utilizing the integrated platform for upcoming small satellite deployments. Throughout the first half of 2026, the partners intend to enhance the platform’s autonomous scheduling algorithms to better handle complex orbital geometries and interference mitigation. This roadmap includes the addition of more diverse ground assets to the StellarStation network, ensuring that Antaris users have access to a resilient and geographically distributed communication framework for high-cadence Earth observation and telecommunications missions.
