Amaravati Quantum Valley has successfully developed an indigenous dilution refrigerator reaching 4 Kelvin, marking a major milestone in India’s quantum hardware ecosystem. Built with over 80% domestic components, the achievement strengthens “Make in India” efforts and supports testing for future quantum computing, secure communication, and advanced sensing technologies
In a significant milestone for India’s emerging quantum computing hardware ecosystem, Amaravati Quantum Valley (AQV) has successfully developed an indigenous dilution refrigerator that has achieved temperatures as low as 4 Kelvin, or minus 269 degrees Celsius.
The breakthrough was recorded at the Quantum Reference Facility located at Medha Towers in Amaravati.
According to sources, this temperature range is among the lowest achieved in any research facility in India, and what makes the development notable is that more than 80 per cent of the system components were sourced domestically.
This highlights a growing capability in India’s deep-tech manufacturing ecosystem.
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