It brings together organizations, spacecraft, missions, products, launch systems, locations, and national intelligence into a structured research surface designed to be easier to browse, verify, and connect.
Polaris is meant to be a practical intelligence and research tool, not just a public directory. The goal is to help users understand who is operating in the space sector, what systems and missions they are connected to, and what source-backed evidence exists for those relationships and claims.
Instead of relying on short summaries alone, Polaris emphasizes structured records, linked evidence, and views that let users move between entity-level detail and broader strategic context.
Polaris can be useful for analysts, researchers, investors, operators, journalists, and anyone who needs a faster way to understand the structure of the space economy.
Use Polaris to move quickly across organizations, missions, spacecraft, products, and locations without assembling the context by hand.
The site is built around source-grounded records, so users can inspect the statements and documents behind what they are reading.
The national intelligence views connect operator-level data to policy, budgets, institutions, and broader government space activity.
Polaris Intelligence was created by Ryan Puleo. This project reflects an effort to make space-sector information more structured, more traceable, and more useful for real-world research and decision-making.
View Ryan on LinkedInThe broader aim is to make space intelligence easier to navigate: less fragmented, less opaque, and more useful for people who need evidence-backed context instead of scattered references across many sources.