Orbital
Intelligence.
Reimagining space domain awareness through distributed atmospheric sensing and autonomous orchestration.

Part I: The Invisible Battlefield
Four hundred kilometers above your head, a silent war unfolds every second. Thousands of objects—satellites, debris, unknown actors—move at speeds that would vaporize steel on contact. The operators tasked with tracking this chaos face an impossible cognitive burden: making sense of a three-dimensional chessboard where pieces move at 28,000 kilometers per hour.
"Space domain awareness isn't about seeing more. It's about understanding faster. The human mind cannot process orbital mechanics at machine speed—but it can when augmented by IRIS."
Current space surveillance relies on operators staring at screens filled with trajectory data, conjunction warnings, and sensor feeds from dozens of sources. By the time a human has processed the information, the situation has already changed. Omniris changes this equation fundamentally: instead of feeding data to humans, we feed understanding.
Cognitive Fusion for Orbital Operators
IRIS processes the raw inputs that would overwhelm human cognition—radar returns, optical tracking, signal intelligence, thermal signatures—and synthesizes them into intuitive spatial awareness. An operator wearing IRIS doesn't see data points. They see intentions. Movement patterns that suggest hostile maneuvering. Debris fields that will threaten assets in 47 hours. Gaps in coverage that adversaries might exploit.
Orbital Intuition Engine
The system has learned from decades of space operations data—every conjunction, every maneuver, every anomaly. When an IRIS-equipped operator looks at a display, they perceive orbital mechanics the way a veteran astronomer perceives star patterns: instantly, intuitively, and with the full weight of accumulated expertise.
From Tracking to Predicting
Traditional systems tell you where objects are. IRIS tells you where they will be—and why. The distinction matters enormously. A satellite that adjusts its orbit by a fraction of a degree might be routine station-keeping or the first move in a hostile positioning sequence. IRIS recognizes the difference by understanding context that would take a human analyst hours to assemble.
For satellite operators, this means knowing that a conjunction risk is forming before automated warnings trigger. For defense analysts, it means understanding adversary patterns at the speed of observation. For mission planners, it means optimizing trajectories with the intuition of thousands of previous missions compressed into real-time guidance.
Application 01
CONJUNCTION MASTERY. Transform collision avoidance from reactive alerts to predictive awareness. See the geometry of risk before it materializes.
Application 02
PATTERN SYNTHESIS. Correlate behavior across constellations to identify anomalies that individual tracking systems would miss entirely.
The Last High Ground
Space is the ultimate arena where cognitive speed determines outcome. Debris doesn't wait for committee decisions. Adversaries don't pause for shift changes. The operators who will dominate this domain are those who can think at orbital velocity—who can perceive the invisible and act on understanding, not just data.
Omniris is building the cognitive infrastructure for space superiority. Not by adding more sensors or bigger screens, but by augmenting the operators who make the decisions that matter. When every second counts and the margin for error is measured in meters at hypersonic speeds, synthetic intuition isn't a luxury. It's survival.