Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    How to Reach More Buyers With Less Effort

    April 28, 2026

    JPMorgan Chase data center gets tax breaks, creates just one full-time job

    April 28, 2026

    The Organizational Habit That Turns Small Issues Into Major Setbacks

    April 28, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Live Wild Feel Well
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Green Brands
    • Wild Living
    • Green Fitness
    • Brand Spotlights
    • About Us
    Live Wild Feel Well
    Home»Brand Spotlights»Quantum Art’s Series A Is Now $140 Million
    Brand Spotlights

    Quantum Art’s Series A Is Now $140 Million

    wildgreenquest@gmail.comBy wildgreenquest@gmail.comApril 28, 2026003 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


    Four months after closing $100 million, the Israeli quantum startup Quantum Art added another $40 million in an oversubscribed extension.

    AFP via Getty Images

    When a Series A funding round gets extended four months after closing, it usually means that the company that raised the round is so hot they essentially have investors begging to put their money in. I’m not sure if that’s happening here, but Quantum Art, the trapped-ion quantum computing startup with a roadmap to a massive 1,000-qubit quantum computer, just extended its $100 million series A with an additional $40 million in funding.

    That brings the company’s lifetime funding to roughly $164 million, most of it in this big A round. Bedford Ridge Capital, which led the original $100 million tranche announced in December, led the extension as well. New investors joining the cap table include Hudson Bay Capital, Poalim Equity, LIP Ventures, Wolverine Global Ventures and IDA Ventures.

    Quantum Art says the extension was driven by investor demand, and it lands just as the company is making its first real move from R&D into commercial deployment. Along with the extra cash, Quantum Art said it is preparing to launch a Quantum-as-a-Service offering, its first formal commercial product.

    This quantum-as-a-service offering will “serve as a central pillar” of the company’s go-to-market strategy, meaning it plans to mostly offer cloud-based quantum computing, not shippable hardware. That’s the same playbook IBM Quantum, IonQ, IQM Quantum Computers and Quantinuum have been refining for years, but it’s a significant step for the relatively newer startup.

    When I spoke with CEO Dr. Tal David for TechFirst last fall, he framed Quantum Art’s bet in musical terms: today’s quantum systems run operations one or two qubits at a time, sequentially. Quantum Art uses spectrally engineered laser pulses to operate on tens of qubits simultaneously.

    “Instead of playing my guitar note by note, we play chords,” David told me.

    Combined with what the company calls optical segmentation (using lasers to partition a single long ion chain into 20+ independently operating cores) and reconfigurable connectivity that moves information rather than physically shuttling ions, Quantum Art claims a viable roadmap to a million physical qubits in a 50-by-50-millimeter footprint.

    I covered the architecture in more depth in October.

    The new money is for three things, according to the company. First up is finishing Perspective, a 1,000-qubit multi-core machine Quantum Art has positioned as its first commercial-scale system. Hitting 1,000 physical qubits with the company’s claimed error-correction efficiency (roughly 10 physical qubits per logical qubit) would put it in striking range of meaningful quantum advantage on real workloads.

    Second, the funding will support development of the advanced optical technologies that scaling requires, given that Quantum Art’s laser systems are arguably as much of the engineering challenge as the ion traps themselves. And finally, there’s global business development: sales, partnerships, and the international footprint expansion that the QaaS launch implies.

    “Most approaches still run into scaling limitations, while Quantum Art’s architecture is designed to overcome those constraints,” Michael Reidler, a partner at Bedford Ridge Capital, said in a statement. “We believe that gives the company a meaningful advantage as the market matures.”

    Quantum Art’s roadmap calls for Perspective to come online by 2027, supporting roughly 100 logical qubits. The company demonstrated a 200-ion chain late last year, which it claims is the longest fully controlled trapped-ion chain to date … a stability proof point that matters more than headline qubit counts because coherence and control, not just quantity, determine whether a quantum computer can actually do useful work.

    We’ll see if they can extend that into deliverable quantum advantage.



    Source link

    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    wildgreenquest@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    JPMorgan Chase data center gets tax breaks, creates just one full-time job

    April 28, 2026

    Why Trump says the WHCD attack is proof he needs a ballroom

    April 28, 2026

    Leaked Update Redesigns Your Library

    April 27, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Study finds asking AI for advice could be making you a worse person

    March 31, 202611 Views

    Best Road Running Shoes (Spring 2026): Over 100 Shoes Tested

    March 25, 20264 Views

    Secrets of the Blue Zones. My Summary

    March 17, 20264 Views
    Latest Reviews
    8.5

    Pico 4 Review: Should You Actually Buy One Instead Of Quest 2?

    wildgreenquest@gmail.comJanuary 15, 2021
    8.1

    A Review of the Venus Optics Argus 18mm f/0.95 MFT APO Lens

    wildgreenquest@gmail.comJanuary 15, 2021
    8.3

    DJI Avata Review: Immersive FPV Flying For Drone Enthusiasts

    wildgreenquest@gmail.comJanuary 15, 2021
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.