Startup testing nuclear battery technology in orbit
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
A Florida startup, City Labs, launched the BOHR cubesat on SpaceX’s Transporter‑17 rideshare on July 7, marking the first commercial in‑orbit test of its NanoTritium betavoltaic power system. The device uses tritium decay to generate microwatts of electricity, intended to keep low‑power payloads running for years without sunlight. While the satellite bus still relies on solar panels, the betavoltaic unit powers the experimental payload, demonstrating a safe, low‑radiation nuclear source approved under the FAA’s new radioactive‑material launch framework. The mission, funded in part by NASA and Pentagon contracts, seeks to validate the technology for future deep‑space, lunar‑shadow, and contested‑environment missions. City Labs plans a tritium‑based heater unit test in 2027 and aims to commercialize long‑duration micro‑power solutions.
💡 Why It Matters
- · It proves a regulatory pathway for commercial nuclear micro‑power in space, opening markets for missions where solar energy is impractical.