Aurora builds solar-first lunar microgrids that generate, store, and distribute power from South Pole power zones to industrial worksites.
At the lunar South Pole, sunlight is more than illumination. It is industrial fuel. Aurora captures, stores, and routes that energy into the first powered lunar worksites.
Every serious lunar operation depends on energy: robotics, thermal systems, communications, surface mobility, extraction equipment, research instruments, and habitat support. Aurora is designed to solve that first constraint.
Aurora is built around a simple infrastructure logic: collect energy where sunlight is strongest, store it for operational continuity, and deliver it where lunar work happens.
Solar arrays positioned across high-value South Pole illumination zones.
Layered storage for short-duration, long-duration, and high-demand operations.
Power distribution infrastructure connecting generation zones to worksite demand.
A conceptual sequence showing how Aurora’s first lunar utility layer becomes operational.
Conceptual deployment sequence for system illustration.
Aurora separates the best solar collection zones from the highest-demand operating zones, then links them through resilient distribution infrastructure.
Aurora is designed as a scalable power system, not a single installation. Each module expands generation, storage, delivery, or local utility access.
Captures energy across high-illumination lunar terrain.
Balances supply, demand, shadow periods, and operational peaks.
Moves energy from generation zones to worksite infrastructure.
Provides usable power access for lunar surface systems.
Coordinates local delivery, redundancy, and operational load.
Aurora advances through measurable infrastructure gates. Each phase must prove the conditions needed for the next.
Aurora is designed as a utility platform: a physical energy asset that can expand with demand and support multiple categories of lunar operations.
Aurora is designed as a commercial infrastructure platform, not a territorial claim. Its purpose is to supply energy for lawful lunar activity through scalable, cooperative power systems.
Aurora is building the solar generation, storage, and distribution infrastructure needed for sustained lunar operations.