Diffraqtion Raises Pre-Seed to Build Quantum Camera-Enabled Satellite and Telescope Constellations
BOSTON, January 13, 2026 -- Diffraqtion, an MIT and University of Maryland spinout developing satellite constellations powered by a novel quantum camera, today announced the close of their pre-seed funding round, led by QDNL Participations, with participation from milemark•capital, Aether VC, ADIN, Offline Ventures, and a non-dilutive DARPA SBIR Direct-to-Phase 2 contract supporting space situational awareness capabilities. The total amount of funding between dilutive and non-dilutive raised is $4.2 million.
Founded by Johannes Galatsanos, Christine Wang, Ph.D., and Prof. Saikat Guha, Diffraqtion has developed a first-of-its-kind quantum camera that enables satellites and telescopes to see farther and process visual information dramatically faster than conventional systems. Built on Prof. Guha's research with NASA and DARPA, the technology delivers up to 20 times higher resolution and 1,000 times faster processing than conventional cameras and processors, enabling ultra-high-resolution imaging systems at a fraction of the cost of today's satellites and ground-based telescopes.
Diffraqtion's novel approach enables the company to deploy large constellations of low-cost, high-precision satellites for space domain awareness, defense, and commercial Earth observation. These satellites support applications ranging from orbital safety and intelligence to agriculture, disaster response, and environmental monitoring.
In recent months, and in addition to the amount raised, the company has received multiple major recognitions, including:
- First place at SLUSH 100, selected from over 1,000 startups, resulting in an $1.1M equity prize from Cherry Ventures and General Catalyst
- TechConnect's "2025 Best Space Innovation" $100k award
Diffraqtion is also part of the U.S. Space Force's Apollo Accelerator, where it is actively demonstrating and refining its quantum imaging technology with government partners. In early 2026, the company plans to conduct on-sky demonstrations with the University of California Observatories, followed by space-based demonstrations.
"Space-based infrastructure powers our communications, navigation, and defense, and through Earth Imaging, it supports everything from agriculture to disaster response," said Johannes Galatsanos, CEO and Co-Founder of Diffraqtion. "Yet despite the boom in low-cost launches, we still lack clear, continuous visibility of what's happening above and below the atmosphere. Our quantum camera changes that: it tracks smaller, faster objects to keep assets in orbit safe, while delivering ultra-high-resolution imaging for critical applications on Earth."
"Quantum sensing can bring new capabilities to monitoring and protecting orbital infrastructure," said Chad Rigetti, Venture Partner at QDNL Participations "Diffraqtion's team combines deep photonics and quantum expertise with practical defense and space insight - exactly what's needed to bring quantum imaging into operational reality."


