IonQ has published a thorough technical blueprint for a fault-tolerant quantum computer (FTQC), a move that is reminiscent of the early days of classical computing. The Walking Cat Architecture specification, which covers the whole stack from high-level compilers to physical micro-architecture, is the first end-to-end framework based on practical engineering restrictions. This announcement coincides with a pivotal moment for the sector, as the total amount of money invested by governments worldwide in quantum technologies has exceeded $56 billion, while private fund injections have reached around $5 billion in 2025 alone.

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Bridging Theory and Execution

The quantum sector has spent years bridging the gap between theoretical ideas and practical devices. By offering a comprehensive description of components and subcomponents supported by in-depth performance simulations, IonQ’s new blueprint seeks to close this gap. John von Neumann’s 1945 study on the EDVAC, which defined the stored-program architecture that still dominates classical computers today, is compared by IonQ leadership to the document.

The Walking Cat is the framework IonQ plans to employ to achieve its 2030 goal of 2 million physical qubits and 80,000 logical qubits, it is not only a theoretical exercise. IonQ signals that the era of Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing has moved from “if” to “how” by describing a device that can execute millions of gates on hundreds of logical qubits.

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Why the ‘Walking Cat’?

The physical behavior of its quantum resources is where the architecture gets its name. The “Cat” stands for cat states, a unique class of quantum resource that allows logical measurements to be carried out without destroying the sensitive quantum data that is being safeguarded. These states function as probes that communicate with logical qubits to disclose faults without causing the underlying computation to collapse. This idea dates back to Peter Shor’s error correction techniques from 1996 and Erwin Schrödinger’s well-known thought experiment from 1935.

The physical movement of ions inside a quantum charge-coupled device (QCCD) chip is referred to as “walking.” The architecture moves ions across a grid of specialized zones gate zones for two-qubit operations and optical zones for measurement and reset instead of using fixed wire. Any ion can be directed to any zone on the semiconductor as needed with this mobility, which enables any-to-any qubit communication.

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The Four ‘Hammers’ of Design

IonQ structured the architecture on four key principles Hierarchy, Modularity, Regularity, and Simplicity known by the acronym HMRS (pronounced “hammers”) to guarantee that the machine stays buildable at scale.

  1. Hierarchy: The compiler, logical architecture, and micro-architecture are the three separate levels that make up the system. Because of this division, physical hardware advancements are possible without necessitating a complete overhaul of the high-level compiler.
  2. Modularity: Various parts, including cat factories and magic factories, function separately. They only communicate via exchanging resource states, which allows the computer to do several tasks across the chip at once.
  3. Regularity: A recurrent design language is used in the architecture. For example, the system is predictable to build and test because a “three-ring framework” utilized in memory blocks is tiled repeatedly throughout magic and cat factories.
  4. Simplicity: IonQ has chosen a uniform framework, which may be the most significant decision. The Walking Cat employs a single, consistent family of codes including bivariate and generalized bicycle codes for every component, in contrast to previous systems that frequently combine complex code families that need for distinct interfaces.

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Built on Proven Hardware

The Walking Cat is built for hardware capabilities that have already been proven, in contrast to systems that depend on future innovations. This offers dependable ion transport and two-qubit gate fidelity higher than 99.99%. High fidelity is crucial because it keeps the system from becoming unfeasibly sluggish by enabling cat state preparation through post-selection in a matter of attempts.

In particular, the architecture makes use of the inherent advantages of trapped-ion systems, where ion shuttling is an excellent design primitive. Compared to superconducting systems, which frequently ask for physically long-range couplers that add a great deal of manufacturing complexity, this offers a clear advantage.

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From Material Science to Cryptography

IonQ offered simulations of practical applications to showcase the capabilities of the architecture. Using 10,000 actual qubits, a Heisenberg Hamiltonian simulation pertinent to intricate material science research was assembled onto an instance of the architecture. Approximately one month is the expected execution time to achieve chemical precision, a problem that is currently regarded as classically intractable.

Additionally, Shor’s period-finding technique for a 20-bit integer was successfully compiled onto a 102-qubit Walking Cat instance by the team. This demonstrates that the logical Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) of the architecture is ubiquitous and able to translate intricate quantum algorithms from beginning to conclusion.

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The Road Ahead

The goal of this announcement is to “open the books” on IonQ’s journey to utility-scale quantum computing in a seven-part technical series. The noise models, the five kinds of component factories (including the Bell and Qubit factories), and the micro-architecture mapping will all be covered in later chapters.

IonQ is portraying the Walking Cat as the cornerstone of a new age in computational science by publishing this blueprint, rather than just as a single machine. The industry now has a clear roadmap to follow as the business continues to expand physical qubit counts toward the thousands.

You can also read IonQ Financial Results 2026 Q1 Report Earnings Announcement

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