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Ambarella CV5 Drone Chip Powers Antigravity A1 at CES

CES 2026 starts January 6, and Ambarella’s latest edge-AI technology is back in the drone spotlight. The US-headquartered semiconductor company announced that its CV5 AI vision system-on-chip (SoC) is powering the new Antigravity A1, a compact drone positioned as the world’s first all-in-one 8K 360-degree aerial camera. The aircraft is being demonstrated at CES as a showcase for Ambarella’s low-power, high-resolution imaging platform and its ability to run AI inference directly on the edge.

Antigravity A1 8K 360-degree drone powered by Ambarella CV5 edge-AI processor on display at CES.Antigravity A1 8K 360-degree drone powered by Ambarella CV5 edge-AI processor on display at CES.
The Antigravity A1

The debut comes at an unusual moment. While CES exhibitors highlight new drone capabilities driven by advanced silicon, the FCC’s recent move to add all foreign-manufactured drones and “critical components” to its Covered List could make it harder for some of these same aircraft to enter or remain in the US market.

Ambarella brings imaging and edge AI together

In its announcement, Ambarella highlights the CV5 SoC as the processing core of the Antigravity A1. The chip supports 8K video capture and on-device AI processing at low power levels suited to lightweight drones. Ambarella positions the platform as a way to enable smarter, more autonomous systems that can perform perception, subject tracking, and analytics without relying on cloud connectivity.

Ambarella has a long history in high-performance imaging silicon. Its video and vision processors have powered action cameras, security systems, automotive perception platforms, and earlier generations of camera-focused drones. With CV-series SoCs, the company is extending that heritage into edge AI, combining advanced image processing with dedicated neural-network acceleration on the same chip.

The Antigravity A1 itself is marketed as a sub-250-gram aircraft designed for both consumers and professional creators. Its dual-lens configuration enables full-sphere 360-degree capture, with the CV5 SoC handling high-resolution video and AI workloads on board.

For drone manufacturers, Ambarella’s pitch is clear: better video quality plus longer flight time, without sacrificing compute capability.

A competitive market for “drone brains”

Ambarella competes in a crowded edge-AI landscape that includes platforms such as NVIDIA Jetson, Qualcomm’s robotics and drone-focused Snapdragon systems, and other dedicated AI vision processors. Many of those solutions emphasize raw compute performance or developer ecosystem strength.

Ambarella’s differentiator is its “imaging-first” architecture. The company’s chips are built around advanced video pipelines, then layered with AI acceleration optimized for vision tasks. That combination is attractive for small drones that need high-quality video, low latency, and strong battery efficiency rather than large, power-hungry compute modules.

That positioning could become more significant as drone makers look for hardware stacks that balance performance, energy efficiency, compliance considerations, and long-term supply-chain stability.

FCC policy shifts raise new supply-chain questions

In December 2025, the FCC added foreign-manufactured uncrewed aircraft systems and foreign-produced UAS “critical components” to its Covered List under authority linked to the FY25 National Defense Authorization Act. Products on the Covered List cannot receive new FCC equipment authorizations, which are required for importation and marketing in the United States.

The FCC clarified that existing authorizations are not automatically revoked. Previously approved aircraft may continue to be sold and used, although the agency also outlined a process that could allow future action affecting import or marketing in certain circumstances.

This change has broad implications beyond any single brand. It applies to foreign-made drones generally, and to specific categories of components deemed critical to UAS operation.

US-designed chip, foreign-made aircraft: where A1 fits

The Ambarella-Antigravity pairing illustrates the complexity of today’s drone supply chains.

Ambarella is a US-headquartered fabless semiconductor company. It designs its chips domestically but, like most chip vendors, relies on overseas fabrication partners for manufacturing. The Antigravity A1, meanwhile, is a new drone brand incubated by Insta360, which is based in China and typically manufactures hardware abroad.

If the A1’s radio hardware secured FCC certification before the December ruling, its initial US availability may remain unaffected. However, because it is a foreign-manufactured aircraft using foreign-produced components, its future variants or hardware revisions could face additional barriers if they require new FCC authorizations. Any assessment will depend on how the agency interprets manufacturing origin and component status under the Covered List framework.

At the same time, Ambarella’s US headquarters and long track record with Western automotive and security customers may make it an appealing technology partner for US or NDAA-aligned drone manufacturers that are seeking more domestically oriented hardware stacks.

A story to watch: innovation at CES, policy in Washington

The Antigravity A1 shows how fast-moving edge-AI innovation and evolving regulatory policy are now intersecting in the drone industry. On the CES floor, Ambarella’s CV5 chip demonstrates what is possible when powerful imaging and AI run directly on lightweight aircraft. In Washington, new rules are reshaping which systems can reach the US market, and under what conditions.

How drone manufacturers align design, manufacturing location, and component sourcing in response to these shifts may become one of the defining industry questions of 2026.

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