The Quantum Heartbeat: Colorado Launches Nation’s First Open-Access Timing Testbed to Secure Global Infrastructure
Colorado Quantum Incubator COQI
The Colorado Quantum Incubator (COQI) announced the creation of the first open-access, commercially available third-party validation testbed for quantum timing technologies in the United States, marking a significant advancement in the competition for quantum supremacy and national resilience. This 13,000-square-foot building, which is located in the center of Boulder’s Flatiron Park, is intended to serve as a “sandbox” where business titans, startups, and academic institutions may thoroughly test and evaluate the upcoming generation of precision timing gear.
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A Solution for a Fragile World
Modern infrastructure like power grids, GPS-dependent navigation, high-frequency financial trading platforms, and telecommunications networks requires nanosecond accuracy. GPS and other GNSS provide this “heartbeat.” Satellite communications are growing more sensitive to spoofing and jamming, threatening the global economy and national security. “Resilient timing is foundational,” stated project lead partner Matt Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion. He pointed out that it is no longer practical to rely on weak communications that can be stopped by inexpensive jammers as electronic warfare becomes more common. By enabling the shift to “quantum-grade” timing that is independent of space-based signals, the COQI testbed seeks to bridge this gap.
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The Technical Backbone: Neutral Atoms and “White Rabbit”
Compared to conventional laboratory settings, the facility’s technical capabilities are a significant advancement. The testbed makes use of the Tiqker quantum optical clock, which was created in partnership with Safran Electronics & Defense and Infleqtion. The Tiqker, in contrast to conventional satellite clocks, uses the intrinsic stability of neutral atoms to preserve time with picosecond accuracy, which is orders of magnitude more accurate than current standards.
The testbed incorporates “White Rabbit” (WR) technology to guarantee that this accuracy may be applied in real-world settings. White Rabbit is an Ethernet-based synchronization technology that was first created at CERN and allows sub-nanosecond accuracy over fiber optic networks. Additionally, the facility will make use of Xairos Systems’ Quantum Time Transfer technology, which synchronizes systems with exceptional security by using entangled photons delivered over fiber and free-space optical connections.
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Bridging the “Valley of Death”
Assisting quantum startups in navigating the “missing middle” the challenging shift from a lab-bench prototype to a field-ready, commercial product is one of the COQI’s main goals. In the past, the equipment needed to test these technologies such as cryostats and ultra-stable lasers required specialist personnel with PhD degrees and cost millions of dollars.
The “plug-and-play” approach is used by the new testbed. This makes it possible for defense contractors and smaller businesses to bring their hardware to the Boulder facility, connect to timing references that have been calibrated, and obtain standard benchmarking data. According to Chris Muldrow, Executive Director of COQI, this infrastructure enables businesses to “stress-test their innovations against real-world infrastructure demands,” overcoming the industry’s present slow, ad hoc iteration cycles.
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A Growing Ecosystem and Global Competition
The Mountain West’s rise to prominence as a global center for quantum technology is largely due to the testbed’s launch. The Colorado region was named a “Tech Hub” for quantum information technology by the U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA) in 2023. Since then, the Colorado School of Mines, Colorado State University, and CU Boulder have joined forces to form the Elevate Quantum alliance, which has raised more than $120 million to promote this goal.
The state’s quantum workforce could grow from 3,000 to over 10,000 employment within the next ten years, according to Governor Jared Polis, who has supported the effort. It is anticipated that the economic “value-creation engine” would draw substantial international capital and expertise to the area.
The United States is not alone in this endeavor, though. The announcement coincides with fierce competition throughout the world, with the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) reaching its own qubit operations milestones and India just opening an open-access quantum testbed in Amaravati.
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National Security and Future Horizons
Beyond its commercial value, the testbed speeds up the creation of a domestic supply chain for quantum technology, thereby meeting a vital national security demand. The facility bolsters U.S. leadership in a high-stakes technology race by evaluating innovative solutions in industries like energy and high-speed internet.
The Colorado Quantum Incubator has an ambitious roadmap, but the current focus is on precise timing. Dedicated testbeds for the following are anticipated in future phases:
- Quantum Networking: Enabling the fundamental framework for a “Quantum Internet” through quantum networking.
- Inertial Sensing: Creating navigation systems that can function precisely without a satellite signal is known as inertial sensing.
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Industry Perspectives
More than ten government organizations, including the European Space Agency and the U.S. Space Force’s SpaceWERX, as well as major corporations like Viasat and Vodafone, have already expressed interest in the facility, indicating a strong “market pull.”
Quantum technologies are a “step change” in performance rather than a slight increase, according to John Francis, Managing Director of Stout Street Capital. The significance of purpose-built real estate where cutting-edge technology can be “rigorously tested under real-world conditions” was also emphasized by BioMed Realty’s Jon Bergschneider.
Applications for the first group of industry testers are now being accepted at the COQI facility in Flatiron Park. As the global digital infrastructure strives for a more robust “heartbeat,” Colorado has officially started the next generation of clocks to tick away.
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