Wireless solar power beaming system for satellites in orbit
Star Catcher transmits concentrated solar energy to satellites via optical power beaming, bypassing the need for onboard solar retrofits. The engineering-heavy hiring mix (9 of 11 active roles) skewed toward senior and lead positions reflects the complexity of space systems integration and optical reliability — their top pain points. Stack choices (C, C++, MATLAB, Zemax for optical design, Altium for hardware) show deep hardware and physics simulation capability, matching their focus on guidance algorithms, ADCS emulation, and reducing optical failure risk.
Star Catcher builds a wireless power transmission network designed to supply satellites in orbit. The core technology transmits concentrated solar energy via optical beams directly to existing satellite solar arrays, delivering up to 10x more power than onboard systems alone. Founded in 2024 and based in Jacksonville, Florida, the company operates as a 11–50-person team structured around engineering (spacecraft systems, guidance algorithms, optical design), with emerging financial and operational support functions. Current work spans orbital power grid deployment, space-to-space beaming spacecraft design, guidance and control algorithms, ADCS component emulation, and operational forecasting for power-beaming availability.
Star Catcher transmits concentrated solar energy to satellites via optical power beaming, delivering power directly to existing solar arrays without hardware retrofit. The system aims to provide up to 10x more power generation than satellites' onboard systems alone.
Star Catcher uses C, C++, Python, and MATLAB for simulation and control algorithms. Zemax handles optical system design, Altium Designer for hardware, and standard business tools (QuickBooks, Asana, Slack, Google Workspace) for operations and project management.
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