Orbital Defense Stations
Crewless platforms designed to hold position in a lower orbital layer, beneath the satellite belt, ready to act in defense of the assets above them.
Golan Dynamics is an early-stage American aerospace company developing orbital defense stations. Our stations are being designed to hold position in low orbit, beneath the satellite belt, and to deploy interceptors that defend critical spacecraft and the future of American space lanes.
Space underpins nearly every instrument of modern security, from early warning and navigation to communications and intelligence. Yet the satellites carrying that weight were largely built for an era without adversaries.
Golan Dynamics is developing orbital defense stations that operate in a layer below the satellite belt. Positioned beneath the assets they protect, these stations are being designed to hold a constant watch over the orbital environment and to deploy interceptors when a threat emerges, helping keep both critical spacecraft and the emerging American space lanes secure.
We are designing stations to hold a low orbital layer, close to the assets and space lanes that depend on them rather than far removed from the action.
Orbit is no longer a benign environment. Our work assumes a contested domain and is built for systems that must keep operating under pressure.
Our interceptors are designed to operate low enough to reenter and burn up after use, leaving no lasting debris to endanger other spacecraft.
The space domain has shifted faster than the systems built to operate inside it. Understanding that gap is the starting point for everything we build.
Tens of thousands of tracked objects now share key orbital regimes. Crowding raises collision risk and makes it harder to tell ordinary activity from deliberate action.
A growing number of actors are pursuing systems intended to disrupt, degrade, or disable spacecraft. The range of threats facing allied assets keeps widening.
Today's picture of the orbital environment is fragmented and often delayed. Operators can lack the timely, fused insight needed to read intent and respond.
Orbital traffic and commerce are growing fast, yet the transit corridors they will depend on have no persistent presence watching over them.
Four focus areas, developed as one coherent approach to defending the orbital domain. Each represents active work, not a deployed or contracted system.
Crewless platforms designed to hold position in a lower orbital layer, beneath the satellite belt, ready to act in defense of the assets above them.
Our stations are being designed to release interceptors on demand, so a response can reach a threat in orbit rather than waiting at the platform.
Developing sensor fusion approaches that build a clearer, continuously updated picture of objects and activity across key orbital regimes.
Building toward a persistent defensive presence that keeps the orbital transit corridors of the coming decades open, predictable, and defensible.
Rather than isolated point solutions, Golan Dynamics is developing a unified platform. It carries each defense station from raw observation through to interceptor response inside a single architecture.
Ingesting signals from diverse sources to observe the orbital environment continuously.
Correlating multi source observations into a single, coherent picture of objects and behavior.
Turning the fused picture into clear assessments and tasking for the stations on watch.
Committing and directing interceptors from the right station when conditions become contested.
Representative architecture concept. Components reflect areas of active research and development.
Golan Dynamics is early, focused, and building. If our mission resonates with you, we want to hear from you.
Backing the early build of American orbital defense infrastructure.
Aerospace, software, and systems builders who want hard problems.
Partners exploring resilient awareness for allied orbital assets.