The first contract for the delivery of the YURTA sub-Kelvin cryostat developed by Bauman Design has been signed
The YURTA cryostat was developed jointly by Bauman Moscow State Technical University and industrial partners under the Russian Ministry of Education and Science's scientific instrumentation program. The first customer is one of Russia’s leading corporations. This landmark event lays the foundation for Russia's technological independence in the strategically important field of scientific equipment.

YURTA is a high-capacity cryostat for research and development in conditions significantly below the temperature of space (tenths of a degree Kelvin). These conditions are the foundation for developments that will shape the technologies of tomorrow, including hybrid optical quantum computing, ultra-sensitive detectors for fundamental science and medicine, secure quantum communications, and artificial intelligence based on neuromorphic processors.
The YURTA optical cryostat enables experimental work with the simultaneous use of high-frequency signal lines, DC lines, and optical inputs/outputs for optical signals. Its extensive functionality will enable the customer's research teams to transmit signals and read data from dozens of independent devices at cryogenic temperatures, enabling high-performance testing of multichannel quantum information processing systems and their core components.
"The launch of serial production and commercialization of YURTA is more than the success of a single project. It confirms that the Russian engineering school is capable of creating high-tech, excellent equipment even in the most complex fields. We are not simply replacing imports; we are laying the foundation for future discoveries to be made in Russian laboratories using Russian facilities," noted Mikhail Gordin, Rector of Bauman Moscow State Technical University.
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