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Sunday, March 29, 2026

Development of quantum navigation technology

 UK tested World-first quantum navigation on national railway to replace GPS tracking systems

Britain’s railway has taken a major step in the development of quantum navigation technologies, with new systems designed to measure train position with extreme precision now being advanced for the national rail network. UK has just taken a giant step toward the future of train navigation after becoming the first country in the world to test a prototype quantum navigation system on a mainline train. The Railway Quantum Inertial Navigation System (RQINS) was trialed on a Great Northern train commuting between London and Welwyn Garden City. The trial was led by Great British Railways (GBR), a state-owned body overseeing the UK rail network. The new approach relies on ultra-sensitive quantum sensors to determine a train’s exact position. It aims to provide precise positioning and reduce reliance on satellite GPS in areas like tunnels or dense urban environments. Quantum inertial navigation uses ultra-sensitive sensors capable of detecting minute changes in motion and rotation. Unlike satellite-based navigation systems, it does not rely on external signals, meaning it could provide highly resilient positioning even in environments where satellite signals are unavailable, including tunnels, dense infrastructure or areas affected by interference.

“For more than two centuries Britain’s railway has forged technologies that have shaped the modern world,” Lord Peter Hendy, UK’s Minister of State for Transport, said. “The development of quantum inertial navigation continues that legacy.” The technology is being developed as a potential future alternative to fixed trackside positioning infrastructure, which can be costly to install and maintain and are vulnerable to environmental disruption or equipment failures. Once developed, quantum will enable a lower cost, more reliable, more resilient system. As part of this development programme, a Rail Quantum Inertial Navigation System (RQINS) has now been tested on a mainline railway for the first time anywhere in the world. The system was carried on a Great Northern train operated by Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR), providing real-world data to help understand how quantum positioning technologies perform within the operational environment of a national railway network to inform its development. During the trial, the team collected real-world data to evaluate how quantum positioning performs in a live national rail network.

Henry said that once developed, quantum systems could offer a lower-cost, more reliable and more resilient solution. Hendy added that the project is part of plans to modernize track and trains under Great British Railways. “With these new capabilities, we’re preventing equipment failures, helping to boost our railway’s reliability and keeping passengers moving,” he pointed out. This milestone builds on work undertaken by the Ministry of Defence and on Transport for London’s network and represents the next step in developing quantum sensing technologies for use on heavy rail. The development programme is being progressed through a specialist consortium led by MoniRail, working with Imperial College London, the University of Sussex, QinetiQ, PA Consulting and the National Physical Laboratory, with support from Innovate UK and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT). In contrast to satellite-based navigation systems like GPS, the technology doesn’t use external signals. This means it could provide highly resilient positioning even in environments where satellite signals are unavailable.

Network Rail, which owns and runs most of the UK’s railway infrastructure, stated that the system detects tiny changes in motion and rotation to continuously track movement. The technology is being developed as an alternative to fixed trackside positioning infrastructure. Such systems can be expensive to install and maintain. It is also vulnerable to environmental disruption or equipment failure. This development is convened by GBRX, the strategic innovation and technology body for Great British Railways, to accelerate the adoption of strategic technologies that improve the railway for passengers and freight. Rail Minister Lord Peter Hendy, said: “For more than two centuries Britain’s railway has forged technologies that have shaped the modern world. The development of quantum inertial navigation continues that legacy. With these new capabilities, we're preventing equipment failures, helping to boost our railway's reliability and keeping passengers moving. It's all part of our plan to modernise track and train under Great British Railways, adopting world-leading technology that increases resilience to improve passenger experience while supporting jobs, growth and homes.”

The trial builds on previous work carried out by the UK’s Ministry of Defense, and tests conducted on Transport for London networks. A specialist consortium led by MoniRail is driving the development. The program is backed by Innovate UK and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology. Meanwhile, Great British Railways’ innovation unit GBRX is coordinating the effort to speed up deployment of new rail technologies. Toufic Machnouk, GBRX managing director noted testing new technologies within the complexity of a live rail network is key to turning frontier innovations into real operational capability. Quantum sensing is one of the UK Government’s frontier technological priorities. “Railways, as one of the country’s most complex operational systems, provide a powerful platform for developing and scaling these capabilities for rail and beyond,” Machnouk added. Developing new technologies within the complexity of a railway network is essential to understanding how frontier technologies can be translated into operational capability. 

Though still in progress, the technology could enable a more resilient rail system. “This test represents an early, but important step in that development journey and demonstrates how collaboration between government, academia and industry can accelerate the development of frontier technologies,” Machnouk concluded. This programme begins the process of understanding how quantum positioning could fundamentally reshape how railways work. In the future, it could reduce reliance on costly trackside positioning systems while enabling new capabilities for signalling, improved operational performance, network planning, enhanced condition monitoring and more intelligent railway operations. This test represents an early but important step in that development journey and demonstrates how collaboration between government, academia and industry can accelerate the development of frontier technologies.





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Saturday, March 28, 2026

Discovery of first ruby-like crystals on Mars

 NASA rover found fluorescent ruby-like gems on Mars

NASA's Perseverance rover has made a surprising discovery on Mars, finding tiny crystals of corundum. The minerals which form rubies and sapphires were embedded in Martian pebbles. This marks the first time such gems have been spotted on the Red Planet. The hints of the mineral were first spotted by Ann Ollila and her colleagues at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. The discovery was made using the SuperCam instrument on the Perseverance rover, which analysed rocks like Hampden River, Coffee Cove and Smiths Harbour. Small, ruby-like crystals embedded in Martian rocks, which may also hide sapphires created in the fury of meteorite impacts. NASA's Perseverance rover found evidence of ruby-like crystals in a rock named Coffee Cove along with two others, a gemological first on the Red Planet. Mars is hiding a clutch of ruby-like crystals in its rocks, observations from the Perseverance rover suggest, and astronomers say other precious minerals, like sapphires, could exist across the Red Planet, too.

The Perseverance rover has found precious stones inside Martian pebbles. These gem grains are made of a substance called corundum, which is also known as ruby or sapphire depending on the traces of metals within it. Ann Ollila at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and her colleagues first spotted hints of corundum while using Perseverance’s SuperCam instrument to examine a rock called Hampden River. SuperCam has several different ways to test a material’s composition, using two different lasers to either burn off its surface or provoke luminescence, then two cameras to examine the resulting light. In both tests, the results for Hampden River were nearly identical to the results from rubies measured in the lab, indicating the presence of tiny grains of corundum in the rock. An international team of researchers presented the findings, based on observations from spring 2025, March 16 at the 57th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Texas. These findings are currently under peer review. The story begins a short time ago on a planet not too far away, when a roving robot the size of a compact car climbed the side of a 4 billion-year-old impact crater and began exploring its rim. On that ancient and stony rim, NASA's Perseverance rover found a curious scattering of pale-colored "float rocks", out-of-place rocks which must have been transported there by impacts, geological activity or hydrological processes.

The results showed tiny grains of corundum, less than 0.2 mm's across, which shone brightly when hit with a laser. Unlike Earth, Mars doesn't have plate tectonics, so the corundum likely formed when meteorites smashed into the ground, heating and compressing the dust. As scientists often do when faced with a curious specimen, they blasted it with a laser, specifically, the green laser from the Perseverance rover's SuperCam, situated atop its mast. This laser excites minerals, causing them to emit light at specific wavelengths. And because every element and compound emits certain wavelengths of light, this reveals a sample's chemical composition. It's also likely that the crystals formed under different conditions than those on our planet. On Earth, corundum is created through metamorphic and igneous processes, in which intense heat and pressure, facilitated by tectonic activity, transform existing rocks into potential gemstones. But because there is no conclusive evidence for plate tectonics on Mars, the researchers suggest that the ruby-like crystals on the Red Planet may have formed through cosmic impacts. "The impacts provide high temperatures and high pressures, which can produce corundum. Hydrothermal fluids are also generated," Payré explained. Yet the researchers must find additional samples, at their origin, to describe their formation mechanism. "As of now, the corundum crystals were found in small pebbles that are coming from elsewhere, i.e., they are out of context. It is therefore difficult to constrain the full story," Payré said.

"[Corundum] usually is associated, on Earth, with tectonism. It's a very specific environment - you have to have a very silica-poor environment, very aluminium-rich," as quoted, Ollila said. "I was very surprised," Allan Treiman of the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Texas said during the conference session. The analysis showed that three of the laser-blasted float rocks exhibited clear signatures of the mineral corundum, with inclusions of the element chromium, crystals which match the chemical description of rubies. However, because the crystals are too small to be seen by Perseverance's imager, and their exact chemical composition is uncertain, the researchers aren't sure whether they have truly found Martian rubies or perhaps some other type of corundum. "The different types of corundum are based on the chemistry," study co-author Valerie Payré, a planetary geologist at the University of Iowa. "Although corundum is Al2O3, there are minor elements like chromium, titanium, and iron that can be present." The match is nearly identical. "These elements will provide the color to the mineral, and the name of it," Payré added. "We cannot quantify the amount of chromium, and other elements like iron and titanium might be present too. It is thus difficult to conclude whether they are rubies or other types of corundum [like sapphires]." The team ultimately classified the crystals as corundum and declined to guess about the variety without more chemical evidence.

Corundum is a mineral made of aluminum and oxygen. It is one of the hardest known natural substances, approaching the toughness of diamonds. Pure corundum is colorless, but microscopic impurities imbue it with brilliant hues. Iron or titanium inclusions yield brilliant blue sapphires, while chromium produces even rarer, resplendent rubies. As of now, the corundum crystals were found in small pebbles which are coming from elsewhere, i.e., they are out of context. However, anyone holding out hope for a future Martian-gemstone-studded necklace may be disappointed. The corundum crystals found within the float rocks are tiny,  less than 0.2 mm's (0.008 inches) in diameter. Could slightly larger Martian rubies exist? "Yes, possibly," study co-author Olivier Beyssac, a senior scientist at the French National Center for Scientific Research said. "Anyway corundum is pretty rare on Earth and rarely present as big crystals so one could expect the same on Mars." Rubies are far from the only spectacular stones found at Jezero crater, and further research may reveal sapphire-like stones there as well. In the past, scientists also discovered signs of other potential gemstones elsewhere on Mars, including quartz and opal, suggesting that our red planetary neighbor is a gem laboratory. "In retrospect, one might not have been, because there are aluminium-rich outcrops elsewhere on the planet and there are impacts, but I thought it was very shocking to see this. I would love to be able to pick one of those up and analyse it and see if it looks red - it's pretty disappointing that all you can see is this white pebble," Ollila said, further adding that when they were hit with the SuperCam laser, they shone brightly. This discovery provides new insights into Mars' geological history and suggests the planet has remained chemically and thermally active more recently than previously believed by us.

Muhammad (Peace be upon him) Name

 















Development of quantum navigation technology

  UK tested World-first quantum navigation on national railway to replace GPS tracking systems Britain’s railway has taken a major step in t...