Defence Finance Monitor

Defence Finance Monitor

Strategic-Technological Analysis: Q.ANT (Germany)

Sep 28, 2025
∙ Paid

In the rapidly evolving landscape of European defense technology, Q.ANT stands out as a deep-tech innovator whose photonic computing and quantum sensor solutions could reshape how Europe approaches artificial intelligence and autonomy. Founded in 2018 by CEO Dr. Michael Förtsch as a spin-off from TRUMPF, Q.ANT GmbH is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany[1][2]. The company’s core mission is to “redefine the way the world computes by using light instead of electricity,” delivering analog photonic processors optimized for complex AI and high-performance computing workloads[1][3]. Its Light Empowered Native Arithmetics (LENA) architecture and bespoke thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) chip platform enable energy-efficient computation, addressing Europe’s need for sustainable AI infrastructure. Simultaneously, Q.ANT is developing quantum-based navigation and sensing devices (such as atomic gyroscopes and magnetometers) that promise greater measurement precision for satellites and autonomous systems[4][5]. These dual-use innovations directly target strategic goals: reducing dependency on foreign semiconductors by creating a European photonic chip industry, and enhancing Europe’s strategic autonomy in space and advanced sensing. This report offers an objective, comprehensive analysis of Q.ANT’s organizational profile, technology portfolio, program engagements, and strategic relevance to NATO and EU defense objectives. It finds that Q.ANT’s technologies are aligned with key European Emerging and Disruptive Technology priorities (especially photonic HPC and quantum sensors) and that its contributions can significantly bolster EU sovereignty and multi-domain capabilities. However, realizing that potential will require closing gaps in program integration, standardization, and technology maturation. The report’s findings are drawn from Q.ANT’s own disclosures and relevant EU/NATO sources, and offer European policymakers and defense planners clear insight into Q.ANT’s role in strengthening the European Defense Technological and Industrial Base (EDTIB).

This post is for paid subscribers

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Defence Finance Monitor · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture