Bringing Federated Learning to Space
Kim, Grace, Svoboda, Filip, Lane, Nicholas
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Abstract-- As Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite constellations rapidly expand to hundreds and thousands of spacecraft, the need for distributed on-board machine learning becomes critical to address downlink bandwidth limitations. Federated learning (FL) offers a promising framework to conduct collaborative model training across satellite networks. Realizing its benefits in space naturally requires addressing space-specific constraints, from intermittent connectivity to dynamics imposed by orbital motion. This work presents the first systematic feasibility analysis of adapting off-the-shelf FL algorithms for satellite constellation deployment. We introduce a comprehensive "space-ification" framework that adapts terrestrial algorithms (FedA vg, FedProx, FedBuff) to operate under orbital constraints, producing an orbital-ready suite of FL algorithms. We then evaluate these space-ified methods through extensive parameter sweeps across 768 constellation configurations that vary cluster sizes (1-10), satellites per cluster (1-10), and ground station networks (1-13). Our analysis demonstrates that space-adapted FL algorithms efficiently scale to constellations of up to 100 satellites, achieving performance close to the centralized ideal. Multi-month training cycles can be reduced to days, corresponding to a 9X speedup through orbital scheduling and local coordination within satellite clusters. These results provide actionable insights for future mission designers, enabling distributed on-board learning for more autonomous, resilient, and data-driven satellite operations. Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite constellations are expanding rapidly, supporting applications in Earth observation (EO), telecommunications, and navigation. Large-scale constellations such as Planet Labs' Dove fleet, SpaceX's Starlink, and Amazon's Project Kuiper already consist of hundreds to thousands of spacecraft, representing some of the largest distributed systems ever deployed. This unprecedented scale is driving a dramatic increase in the volume and diversity of space-based data. Earth observation missions in particular bear the brunt of this data challenge. High-resolution missions such as Landsat-8 produce 1.8 GB per scene and more than 400 TB annually [1]. At constellation scale, Planet Labs' fleet of over 200 satellites generates terabytes of imagery each day [2].
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-20-2025
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