Neutral atom quantum computers and sensors for defense, space, and enterprise
Infleqtion manufactures quantum computing hardware and sensors using neutral atom technology, serving U.S. defense, NASA, and international government agencies alongside commercial customers in finance and telecom. The stack reveals a dual-track operation: quantum-specific software (Cirq, Qiskit) paired with embedded systems tooling (Verilog, VHDL, FPGA, RTOS), while pain points around supply continuity, NYSE compliance, and the jump from research-grade to scalable hardware suggest a company navigating the transition from deep tech to production-scale defense contractor.
Notable leadership hires: Product Marketing Lead, Supply Chain Director
Infleqtion is a public quantum technology manufacturer (NYSE: INFQ) headquartered in Louisville, Colorado, with operations spanning the U.S., Europe, and Asia. The company designs and builds neutral atom quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors—a full-stack portfolio combining custom hardware with the proprietary Superstaq software platform. Current deployments include systems at the U.S. Department of War, NASA, U.K. government, and collaborative projects with NVIDIA on materials science applications using logical qubits. Revenue comes from government procurement (space, defense, energy) and commercial sectors (finance, telecom). Active engineering work centers on quantum error correction, control software, laser R&D, and NVLink integration.
Quantum software (Cirq, Qiskit), embedded systems (Verilog, VHDL, FPGA, RTOS, Embedded Linux), infrastructure (Docker, Azure, AWS, GCP, VMware), and application layers (Python, C/C++, Julia, React). SolidWorks handles mechanical design.
Real-time quantum error correction, control system software for quantum computers, neutral atom quantum computer development, quantum gate protocol development, laser system R&D, and NVIDIA NVLink integration for logical qubit demonstrations.
Infleqtion's technology stack, projects, and hiring signals are inferred from public hiring and company data — career pages, public listings, and company web presence — then clustered and de-duplicated. Figures are estimates that refresh over time. Read our full methodology →
This is not an official vendor or customer list. It is a technology-adoption signal inferred from public data, intended for B2B research.