Dirty Bits in Low-Earth Orbit: The Carbon Footprint of Launching Computers

cs.CY arXiv:2508.06250
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Abstract

Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites are increasingly proposed for communication and in-orbit computing, achieving low-latency global services. However, their sustainability remains largely unexamined. This paper investigates the carbon footprint of computing in space, focusing on lifecycle emissions from launch over orbital operation to re-entry. We present ESpaS, a lightweight tool for estimating carbon intensities across CPU usage, memory, and networking in orbital vs. terrestrial settings. Three worked examples compare (i) launch technologies (state-of-the-art rocket vs. potential next generation), (ii) operational emissions of data center workloads in orbit and on the ground and, (iii) in-orbit aggregation with raw data transmission. Results show that, even under optimistic assumptions, in-orbit systems incur significantly higher carbon costs - primarily due to embodied emissions from launch and re-entry. Our findings advocate for carbon-aware design principles and regulatory oversight in developing sustainable digital infrastructure in orbit.

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