Israel

BEIT - Quantum Computing Company Profile | Quantum Navigator

BEIT

BEIT is an Israeli quantum computing applications company developing quantum solutions for cybersecurity, optimization, and enterprise applications in the Middle East and international markets. The company focuses on quantum algorithms for security applications, quantum-enhanced encryption systems, and quantum software solutions for government and enterprise customers seeking advanced computational capabilities. BEIT collaborates with Israeli defense and technology companies to develop quantum applications for national security, cybersecurity, and strategic computing applications, contributing to Israel’s quantum technology ecosystem and advancing practical quantum computing implementations for critical infrastructure protection and advanced analytics.

Classiq - Quantum Computing Company Profile | Quantum Navigator

Classiq

Classiq has revolutionized quantum software development with its groundbreaking platform that automatically synthesizes high-level functional models into optimized quantum circuits. Founded in 2020 by Nir Minerbi, Yehuda Naveh, and Amir Naveh, the company addresses one of quantum computing’s biggest challenges: translating complex algorithms into efficient quantum circuits. Classiq’s platform uses advanced synthesis algorithms to automatically generate, optimize, and analyze quantum circuits, dramatically reducing development time from months to days. The platform supports multiple quantum hardware backends and integrates with existing quantum development frameworks, enabling developers to focus on algorithm logic rather than low-level circuit optimization. Classiq has secured significant funding and partnerships with quantum hardware companies, cloud providers, and research institutions. Their technology has been adopted by organizations ranging from startups to Fortune 500 companies working on quantum applications in finance, chemistry, optimization, and machine learning. As quantum computers scale toward practical applications, Classiq’s software synthesis approach becomes increasingly critical for unlocking quantum advantage.

Quantum Machines - Quantum Computing Company Profile | Quantum Navigator

Quantum Machines

Quantum Machines is the leading provider of quantum control solutions, developing advanced hardware and software systems that enable precise control and measurement of quantum computers. Founded in 2018 by Itamar Sivan, Nissim Ofek, and Yonatan Cohen, the company created the Quantum Orchestration Platform (QOP), which provides real-time classical processing power directly integrated with quantum processors. Their OPX series quantum controllers feature nanosecond-precision timing, advanced pulse processing capabilities, and the ability to execute complex quantum algorithms with conditional logic and real-time feedback. Quantum Machines’ technology is used by leading quantum computing companies, research institutions, and government laboratories worldwide to operate and optimize their quantum systems. The company’s software suite includes QUA (Quantum Universal Assembly), a high-level programming language designed specifically for quantum control applications. With significant funding and partnerships across the quantum ecosystem, Quantum Machines plays a crucial role in bridging the gap between theoretical quantum algorithms and their practical implementation on quantum hardware.

Quantum Source - Quantum Computing Company Profile | Quantum Navigator

Quantum Source

Quantum Source is an Israeli photonic quantum computing company founded in 2021 by semiconductor veterans including CEO Oded Melamed and Professor Barak Dayan, developing breakthrough technology that harnesses single rubidium atoms trapped on proprietary photonic chips to generate single photons and implement atom-photon entangling quantum gates with five orders of magnitude better efficiency than state-of-the-art implementations, enabling the construction of complex 3D cluster states for error-correction with over $77 million in funding to build large-scale quantum computers by the decade’s end.