The future of navigation is here...
The next X-37B spaceplane mission will include a quantum inertial navigation system... a test of GPS-free navigation using quantum mechanics.
Air & Space Forces Magazine X-37 Heading Back to Space to Test Laser Comms, GPS Alternative
https://www.airandspaceforces.com/x-37-e...ternative/
Quantum navigation systems promise pinpoint accuracy without relying on satellites, making them ideal for everything from submarines to spacecraft.
In short... It means navigation that works without relying on GPS or any external signal...
The core technology is atom interferometry. Atoms are cooled to near absolute zero so they act like waves, then lasers place each atom in a superposition so it travels along two paths at once.
Think of Schrodinger’s cat... the thought experiment where a cat in a sealed box is considered both alive and dead at the same time until you open the box. In quantum physics, particles can exist in multiple states simultaneously.
In this case, each atom is in two different motion states at once... like taking two paths at the same time... until the sensor measures it and the paths interfere. When those atomic waves are recombined, they interfere, producing a pattern that reveals how the sensor has moved... even very slight accelerations or rotations leave a mark. That makes it possible to calculate position and motion without any external signals at all.
If the X-37B flight successfully demonstrates this system in space, it could mark the first real-world use of quantum navigation... and a major step toward signal-independent navigation for aerospace, civilian and defense.
You can take a deep dive with these refs:
The Conversation Quantum Alternative to GPS Navigation Will Be Tested on US Military Spaceplane
https://theconversation.com/quantum-alte...ane-262967
(open-access article)
Phys. Rev. Applied (2024) Closed-loop dual-atom-interferometer inertial sensor
https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRev....21.034050
(open-access preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.15863)
Nature Communications (2023) Enhancing sensitivity of atom-interferometric inertial sensors
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-43374-0
AIP (2025) Developments for quantum inertial navigation systems
https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apr/article/12/...06/3351228
MITRE (2024) Quantum vs. Classical Complementary PNT
https://www.mitre.org/sites/default/file...ry-PNT.pdf
arXiv (2016) Dual Matter-Wave Inertial Sensors in Weightlessness
https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.03598
I’m all for cutting-edge tech... interesting stuff.
But I still like to carry a magnetic compass... just in case the SHTF
The next X-37B spaceplane mission will include a quantum inertial navigation system... a test of GPS-free navigation using quantum mechanics.
Air & Space Forces Magazine X-37 Heading Back to Space to Test Laser Comms, GPS Alternative
https://www.airandspaceforces.com/x-37-e...ternative/
Quantum navigation systems promise pinpoint accuracy without relying on satellites, making them ideal for everything from submarines to spacecraft.
In short... It means navigation that works without relying on GPS or any external signal...
The core technology is atom interferometry. Atoms are cooled to near absolute zero so they act like waves, then lasers place each atom in a superposition so it travels along two paths at once.
Think of Schrodinger’s cat... the thought experiment where a cat in a sealed box is considered both alive and dead at the same time until you open the box. In quantum physics, particles can exist in multiple states simultaneously.
In this case, each atom is in two different motion states at once... like taking two paths at the same time... until the sensor measures it and the paths interfere. When those atomic waves are recombined, they interfere, producing a pattern that reveals how the sensor has moved... even very slight accelerations or rotations leave a mark. That makes it possible to calculate position and motion without any external signals at all.
If the X-37B flight successfully demonstrates this system in space, it could mark the first real-world use of quantum navigation... and a major step toward signal-independent navigation for aerospace, civilian and defense.
You can take a deep dive with these refs:
The Conversation Quantum Alternative to GPS Navigation Will Be Tested on US Military Spaceplane
https://theconversation.com/quantum-alte...ane-262967
(open-access article)
Phys. Rev. Applied (2024) Closed-loop dual-atom-interferometer inertial sensor
https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRev....21.034050
(open-access preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.15863)
Nature Communications (2023) Enhancing sensitivity of atom-interferometric inertial sensors
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-43374-0
AIP (2025) Developments for quantum inertial navigation systems
https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apr/article/12/...06/3351228
MITRE (2024) Quantum vs. Classical Complementary PNT
https://www.mitre.org/sites/default/file...ry-PNT.pdf
arXiv (2016) Dual Matter-Wave Inertial Sensors in Weightlessness
https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.03598
I’m all for cutting-edge tech... interesting stuff.
But I still like to carry a magnetic compass... just in case the SHTF







