Quantum sensor systems and cold-atom components for precision navigation and measurement
AOSense manufactures quantum sensors and atom-optic subsystems for defense and space applications, built on a deep physics foundation (Stanford spinoff, 2004). The tech stack—Zemax, SolidWorks, COMSOL, LabVIEW, MATLAB, FPGAs, ASICs—reflects a hardware-first, simulation-heavy workflow typical of precision engineering. Active projects span control electronics, compact laser systems, and photonic device manufacturing, with hiring accelerating toward mid- and senior-level engineers and researchers—a pattern consistent with scaling from lab prototypes into fieldable systems.
AOSense designs and manufactures quantum sensors, cold-atom technologies, and precision subsystems including atomic frequency standards, gravimeters, accelerometers, gyroscopes, and inertial measurement units (IMUs). Founded as a Stanford spinoff and backed by over 20 years of government contracts (DARPA, Air Force, Army, Navy, NASA, NSF), the company serves defense, intelligence, and space agencies. The 11–50-person team operates as an employee-owned entity and focuses on transitioning quantum devices from laboratory environments into field-deployable systems with long-term stability.
AOSense builds quantum sensors and atom-optic subsystems: atomic clocks, gravimeters, accelerometers, gyroscopes, IMUs, magnetometers, and compact laser systems for precision navigation, timing, and measurement applications.
AOSense primarily serves U.S. government agencies including DARPA, the Department of Defense (Air Force, Army, Navy), NASA, NSF, DTRA, and the intelligence community through prime and subcontractor relationships.
Design and simulation: Zemax, SolidWorks, COMSOL, ANSYS. Electronics and firmware: FPGAs, ASICs, LabVIEW, MATLAB, Python, C, C++, Altium, OrCAD. Reflects hardware-intensive, precision-engineering operations.
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