Kepler Communications


Kepler Communications Inc. is an international satellite telecommunications company based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, with presence in the UK and the USA. The company's stated mission is to create the internet for space and allow-in-space communications for the future space economy. It has also worked on building a satellite network for IoT communication systems.

Overview

Kepler Communications was founded in 2015 by four graduate students from the University of Toronto, who previously worked together on various design projects through the University of Toronto Aerospace Team. The startup was incubated at University of Toronto's Entrepreneurship Hatchery, the Creative Destruction Lab, Ryerson University's DMZ at Ryerson University|DMZ], and was part of the Techstars Seattle 2016 cohort.The company is named in honour of Johannes Kepler, a pioneer in the discovery of the way in which objects in space interact. He is best known for his Laws of Planetary Motion.
Kepler was able to raise $5M in a seed round financing at Techstars, and in the span of 12 months was able to take KIPP from design to orbit. In 2018, the company successfully completed their Series A financing round, raising a total of $16M USD. The round was led by Costanoa Ventures, with participation by Deutsche Bahn's Digital Ventures as a strategic investor.It was followed by Series B funding, in which the company raised around US$60M, led by Tribe Capital in 2021. In April 2023, Kepler announced a successful Series C funding round of US$92 million, bringing its total amount of equity raised to over US$200 million. The round is led by IA Ventures and also backed by Costanoa Ventures, Canaan Partners, Tribe Capital, BDC Capital's Industrial Innovation Venture Fund, and others.
The company started as a builder of a shoebox-sized satellites constellation based on the CubeSat standard to deliver connectivity to other satellites and ground-based stations, allowing for near real-time exchange of data from IoT devices, large scale data backhaul services, and ultimately command and control for other space-based assets.
With its Series B funding round, the company started establishing its presence in the United States of America in 2018. Kepler Communication shifted its focus from IoT to optical constellation technology in 2020 and began to provide Internet connectivity for space-generated data and communications for in-space assets. Since its switch to integrated optical technology, the company has been using its Gen-2 satellites, which are bigger than previous CubeSat standards and weigh over 100 kilograms.
Kepler uses optical as its key technology for building space communication networks. Its test satellites, KIPP, CASE, and TARS, were constructed by Glasgow-based AAC. Kepler then started to develop its operational satellites in-house. In 2022, the company signed a contract with Germany's Tesat-Spacecom to build an in-space communication network with its laser communication terminals. In addition, Kepler Communications began its partnership with Houston-based AXIOM Space and Broomfield-based Skyloom Global to initiate Optical Inter-Satellite Links in the following year.

Satellites constellations

Kepler

Bearing the same name as the company, the Kepler constellation is a constellation of cubesats for Internet of Things, machine-to-machine, and inter-satellite communications services. The first three cubesats, sent to orbit as technology demonstrators, were built in a 3U format. The first two of them were built by AAC Clyde Space and the third by ÅAC Microtec. They are named after fictitious robots in the 2014 film “Interstellar.” KIPP and CASE, which travel at speeds in excess of 7 kilometers per second, have software installed to compensate for Doppler shift.
As of April, 2023, eighteen operational satellites have joined the constellation. They are based on the 6U-format Spartan cubesat platform and were developed by Kepler Communications in cooperation with UTIAS-SFL. Company officials have stated a goal of growing their constellation up to 140 units, all located in Sun-Synchronous polar orbits, approximately 575 km above the Earth's surface.

The Kepler Network

The Kepler Network, previously known as the Aether Network, is the company's optical constellation based on data relay Gen-2 satellites to provide in-space real-time connectivity for orbiting spacecraft moving past the need to rely on ground stations. It will be able to provide data on-demand at up to 2.5 Gigabit-per-second for the end-user through a combination of optical, S-band, and Ku-band technologies. Access to the network will be granted to third-party satellites and other spacecraft equipped with SDA-compatible optical terminals. The first two satellites of the constellation have been launched on 11 November 2023 as part of SpaceX Transporter-9 rideshare mission.
Kepler announced its first ten 300-kilogram optical satellites, featuring onboard compute, would be launched in January 2026, again via Falcon 9, promising its second tranche would orbit 100-gigabit optical technology.
NameCOSPARCatalog N°Launch dateLaunch vehicle
Aether-12023-174AB5828111 November 2023Falcon 9 Block 5
Aether-22023-174AV5829911 November 2023Falcon 9 Block 5