- India’s
First Indigenous Quantum Computing Test Facility Inaugurated in Amaravati
- India’s first indigenous quantum computing testing
facility at SRM University in Amaravati was launched on 14 April 2026 by Andhra
Pradesh Chief Minister, with the establishment of the Amaravati Quantum
Reference Facility (AQRF) aimed at enabling the Amaravati Quantum Valley to
emerge as an international hub for quantum computing. AQRF was launched on
World Quantum Day (14 April), marking the establishment of India’s open
sovereign quantum infrastructure, and features two distinct platforms—the 1Q
testbed at Medha Towers and the 1S testbed at SRM University, Amaravati. It was
launched under the Andhra Pradesh government’s flagship quantum technology hub,
which is under India’s National Quantum Mission. Developed under a national
consortium, the project involves premier institutions such as the Tata
Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Indian Institute of Science (IISc),
IIT Bombay, and DRDO, along with contributions from industry players like
Qubitech and Qbit Force.It will host an IBM 133-qubit quantum computer and has
established 80+ industry and academic partnerships, positioning it among
leading global quantum hubs.The launch of AQRA adds an indigenous hardware
component, complementing existing quantum cloud, skilling, and innovation infrastructure
within the ecosystem.
National Quantum Mission (NQM)
- Approved on 19th April
2023 by the Union Cabinet, the mission is set to span from 2023–24 to 2030–31,
with a budget allocation of ₹6,003.65 crore.
- It aims to seed, nurture
and scale up scientific and industrial R&D and create a vibrant &
innovative ecosystem in Quantum Technology (QT).
- NQM is one of the nine
initiatives under the Prime Minister’s Science Technology Innovation Advisory
Council (PMSTIAC), aimed at positioning India as a global leader in quantum
technology.
- As part of this mission,
four Thematic Hubs (T-Hubs) have been set up, bringing together 14 Technical
Groups across 17 states and 2 Union Territories.
Objectives of the NQM
- Quantum Computing
Development: Build intermediate-scale quantum computers in a phased
manner—20–50 qubits (3 years), 50–100 qubits (5 years), and 50–1000 qubits (8
years)—across platforms such as superconducting and photonic technologies.
- Satellite-Based Quantum
Communication: Enable quantum-secured communication between ground stations
over a range of 2000 km within India, with future expansion for international
secure links.
- Inter-City Quantum Key
Distribution (QKD): Establish secure communication networks over 2000 km using
trusted nodes and wavelength division multiplexing on existing optical fiber
infrastructure.
- Multi-Node Quantum
Networks: Develop scalable quantum networks (2–3 nodes) using quantum memories,
entanglement swapping, and synchronized quantum repeaters.
- Quantum Sensing and
Atomic Clocks: Develop high-precision devices including magnetometers (1
femto-Tesla/√Hz in atomic systems; better than 1 pico-Tesla/√Hz in NV centers),
gravity sensors (better than 100 nano-meter/second²), and atomic clocks with
10⁻¹⁹ fractional instability.
- Quantum Materials and
Devices: Design and synthesize advanced materials such as superconductors,
novel semiconductor structures, and topological materials, along with
components like qubits, single-photon sources/detectors, and entangled photon
systems for computing, communication, and sensing applications.
Initiatives under the National Quantum
Mission
- Quantum-Safe Ecosystem
Framework: A concept paper has been developed to provide a strategic roadmap
for securing and strengthening India’s digital infrastructure against quantum
threats.
- DRDO Initiatives: DRDO is
leading projects to design and test quantum-resilient security schemes, along
with quantum-safe symmetric and asymmetric key cryptographic algorithms.
- Advancements by SETS: The
Society for Electronic Transactions and Security (SETS) under the Office of the
Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA) is advancing Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC)
research. It has implemented PQC algorithms for applications such as Fast
IDentity Online (FIDO) authentication tokens and Internet of Things (IoT)
security.
- C-DoT Innovations: The
Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DoT) under the Department of
Telecommunications (DoT) has developed solutions including Quantum Key
Distribution (QKD), Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC), and Quantum Secure Video
IP Phones.