NASA and IBM Launch First In-Orbit Geospatial AI Model for Real-Time Environmental Analysis

May 8, 2026
NASA and IBM Launch First In-Orbit Geospatial AI Model for Real-Time Environmental Analysis
  • The Prithvi geospatial AI foundation model, a collaborative effort between NASA and IBM, has been uploaded and demonstrated in orbit, becoming the first geospatial foundation model deployed on two in-orbit platforms—the South Australian Kanyini satellite and the Thales Alenia Space IMAGIN-e payload on the International Space Station.

  • NASA’s Prithvi AI model is now the first geospatial foundation model deployed and operated in orbit, enabling real-time environmental analysis from space.

  • Prithvi was chosen in part because it is open-source, allowing rapid experimentation and avoiding from-scratch training, as project leader Dr. Andrew Du noted.

  • Open-source foundation models like Prithvi accelerate scientific and technological development by enabling broad access and collaboration, according to NASA officials including Kevin Murphy.

  • In-orbit validation included flood detection around Lake Norman, North Carolina after Hurricane Helene, demonstrating the model’s versatility beyond fire detection.

  • Prithvi’s architecture supports task adaptation with minimal data transfer, requiring only small decoder packages for new applications, a crucial advantage given satellite bandwidth limits.

  • The deployment highlights potential tasks such as mapping flood plains, monitoring disasters, and predicting crop yields, with future prospects including natural-language–like interaction with satellites and onboard data interrogation.

  • A foundation model is trained on vast unlabeled data and can be fine-tuned with smaller labeled datasets; deploying such models in orbit enables flexible, onboard data analysis with minimal bandwidth for updates.

  • Prithvi was trained on 13 years of Earth observation data from Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2, enabling strong generalization across diverse Earth observation tasks, including flood and cloud detection across different orbits.

  • Prithvi complements NASA’s broader open-source AI initiative, with other projects like Surya and plans for models spanning planetary science, astrophysics, and biology/physical sciences.

  • Lead researcher Andrew Du emphasizes collaborative, accessible AI development and Prithvi’s strong generalization across Earth observation tasks.

  • The in-orbit deployment was led by NASA’s IMPACT team at the Marshall Space Flight Center, with contributions from IBM and Australia’s Adelaide University/SmartSat collaboration.

Summary based on 2 sources


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