Epirus’ flagship product is Leonidas, which beams high-powered electromagnetic pulses at drones as it moves across the ...
Defense technology startup Epirus has raised $250 million in a Series D funding round, as it looks to scale up production of ...
Epirus’ Leonidas is system is a ground-based, directed energy weapon that fires off an electromagnetic pulse to disable swarms of drones, or it can neutralize precision targets.
Demonstration shows how Epirus can freeze drone swarms in their tracks with its high-power microwave technology ...
Epirus plans to expand production of its directed-energy weapons and jump into overseas and commercial markets on the heels ...
Animation shows traditional counter-drone technology vs. Epirus' Leonidas system that can take out entire swarms of drones at once.
Just a day after anti-drone tech startup Epirus raised a $250 million Series D, defense and aerospace startup Shield AI ...
Los Angeles-based startup Epirus raised a $250 million Series D led by 8VC and Washington Harbour Partners in the latest ...
The war in Ukraine has brought drones to the forefront of modern warfare, creating a surge in demand for counter-drone ...
The seven-year-old startup is pushing to further develop and make more of its Leonidas system, which works to fire lasers and other pulses at adversaries' drones.
Epirus, a defense technology startup that makes directed energy and anti-drone systems, has fetched $250 million in Series D capital from investors to aid in the expansion of production capacity.
(Reuters) -Defense technology startup Epirus has raised $250 million in a Series D funding round, as it looks to scale up production of its anti-drone weapons, the company said on Wednesday.