Mission Simulation — Watch Orbitraz Resolve a Conjunction

Four hundred kilometers above Earth. Seventeen thousand miles per hour. This is where the world's economy now lives.

Orbitraz has flagged a conjunction. A fragment of the Cosmos-1408 breakup is closing on an active satellite at fifteen kilometers per second.

Time to closest approach: eighteen hours. Collision probability: one in two thousand.

Legacy operations would begin hours of manual analysis. Orbitraz computes every viable trajectory in milliseconds — scored on fuel, risk, and orbital lifetime.

The standard wide arc costs twelve kilograms of propellant. The optimized path: three.

Executing. A zero-point-three meter-per-second burn — precisely when it matters, and not a gram more than it must.

Collision probability: now less than one in a million. The event is verified and recorded on-chain.

And the operator is rewarded in $ORBT for flying efficiently. Safety, made profitable.

Every day, orbit gets more crowded. Coordination is no longer optional — it's infrastructure.

A narrated, real-time orbital scenario: conjunction detection, trajectory optimization, autonomous maneuver execution, and on-chain rewards — the Orbitraz protocol in action.