Frequently Asked
Orbitraz is a space intelligence and protocol research company building the economic infrastructure for orbital coordination. We publish original research on orbital congestion, collision economics, and space traffic intelligence — and are developing a decentralized protocol that aligns financial incentives with safe, efficient orbital behavior.
Orbital arbitrage captures the economic gap between the cost of a standard collision avoidance maneuver and the cost of an optimized one. When an operator executes a more efficient path, the savings — in fuel, time, and mission life — become a measurable economic gain. The Orbitraz protocol is designed to formalize and reward this efficiency.
Satellite operators, space agencies, orbital data providers, and institutional participants. Operators contribute maneuver data, data providers support the verification layer, and token holders participate in governance.
Orbitraz is currently in development. Our research and intelligence platform is live, and the protocol testnet is under construction. Early participants can join the intelligence brief for updates.
How is Orbitraz different from existing space traffic management?
Existing systems are centralized, advisory, and lack economic incentives. Orbitraz combines original research with a protocol layer that introduces market-based coordination — designed to scale to 100,000+ satellites through decentralized verification and autonomous execution.
Our whitepaper contains the complete technical and economic architecture. You can request access via the Whitepaper page, or explore our Research and Insights sections for published analysis.
Frequently asked questions about the Orbitraz protocol, $ORBT token, orbital arbitrage, and how the decentralized orbital economy works.
Clear answers to the most common questions about Orbitraz, orbital arbitrage, and the $ORBT token economy.