Secretive X37-B space plane to test quantum navigation system — scientists hope it will one day replace GPS

The experimental sensor could be groundbreaking.

A photo of the X37-B space plane on a tarmac at night
(Image credit: Veloz Alexander, US Space Force)

A US military space-plane, the X-37B orbital test vehicle, is due to embark on its eighth flight into space on August 21, 2025. Much of what the X-37B does in space is secret. But it serves partly as a platform for cutting-edge experiments.

One of these experiments is a potential alternative to GPS that makes use of quantum science as a tool for navigation: a quantum inertial sensor.

Samuel Lellouch
Assistant Professor in Digital Twinning, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham

Samuel Lellouch is an Assistant Professor in Digital Twinning at the University of Birmingham and Co-Investigator at the UK Quantum Hub for Sensing and Timing. He collaborates with physicists, engineers and industry to build digital twins of quantum sensors, accelerating their applications in navigation, space, civil engineering and fundamental physics. He was awarded the Young Researcher Prize 2015 from IFRAF/GdR Atomes Froids.

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