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Posted by: SLAC/Stanford on Apr 21, 2024


Location:

Menlo Park , CA

Job Description:

SLAC Job Postings

Position Overview:

The Edge Computing Systems department of the Technology Innovation directorate at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is seeking a talented Electronics Engineer to contribute to development of state-of-the-art electronics systems used in a variety of experiments and facilities. This department develops cutting edge electronics for research facilities around the world and in space.

The work will include science, engineering concept development and hands-on work with detectors systems. SLAC has broad engineering and technical support, but there will be a need for a wide range of work ranging from concept development, to laboratory performance testing, to electronics and software development, to on-site commissioning. This position requires great flexibility in doing whatever is needed for a successful project.

This work involves solving problems no one has ever solved before. There will be lots of opportunities for technical discussions, but in the end the person who takes this job will have responsibility for finding the solutions. Members of our team are encouraged to work in a variety of areas, supporting multiple diverse designs in a dynamic, energetic environment which values work life balance and comes with all of the benefits of being an employee of Stanford University.

As an embedded software engineer you will be part of the Edge Computing Systems department of the Instrumentation Division. Members of this department provide end-to-end electrical and software solutions for the laboratory and external sponsors that encompass unique science and engineering challenges. The department also hosts world-class competence spanning concept, design, testing and operation and maintenance of high-speed data acquisition and electrical control systems for research instrumentation. The technical scope of your work will be limited only by your own demonstrated abilities.

You will have the opportunity to collaborate with a diverse group of scientific and engineering staff and contribute to and participate in designing hardware and firmware components in advanced electronics systems, including high speed cameras for next generation X-ray light sources, readout electronics for quantum sensing devices and data processing engines utilizing Artificial Intelligence inference engines You will also develop solutions to challenges in the areas of sensors, ASICs, analog and high-speed digital electronics boards, high-speed signal transmission, fast data-acquisition and processing, and mechanical packaging and cooling.

Given the nature of this position, SLAC is open to on-site and hybrid work options.

Your specific responsibilities include: Architect and implement firmware in FPGAs to support both the front end operation of detectors and back end operation of data acquisition (DAQ) systems including embedded processor applications and HLS cus tom IPs . Specify and design circuit boards, both low noise analog and high speed digital, to support instrumentation systems. Be part of the team designing the concept, architecture, and components of future advanced instrumentation systems. Perform characterization, calibration and integration of state of the art silicon detectors for use at experiments such as LCLS-II, nEXO, and CMB-S4 . Support for detector system integration, including components such as silicon sensors, ASICs, electronics, firmware, readout electronics and data acquisition. Support the assembly, integration and testing of components for next generation instrumentation systems for a range of applications such as high-energy physics collider or fixed-target experiments, FEL x-ray sources and dark matter searches. Collaborate with other instrumentation development groups at SLAC and other scientific institutions. To be successful in this position you will bring: Bachelor's degree in electronics, physics or related fields and at least 2 years of experience in the following areas, or Master's degree in electronics, physics or related fields. Experience with embedded signal processing in Vivado or Vitis High-Level Synthesis (HLS) Python or C++ coding language experience Experience with standard Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) design flow such as Keras, PyTorch, Caffe or TensorFlow Ability to work with minimal supervision and be self-motivated. Excellent communications skills and ability to work well in a research and development team. Demonstrated ability to work independently and in a team environment. Preferred Qualifications: Doctorate degree or equivalent in electronics, physics or related fields is a plus. SLAC employee competencies: Effective Decisions : Uses job knowledge and solid judgment to make quality decisions in a timely manner. Self-Development : Pursues a variety of venues and opportunities to continue learning and developing. Dependability : Can be counted on to deliver results with a sense of personal responsibility for expected outcomes. Initiative : Pursues work and interactions proactively with optimism, positive energy, and motivation to move things forward. Adaptability : Flexes as needed when change occurs, maintains an open outlook while adjusting and accommodating changes. Communication : Ensures effective information flow to various audiences and creates and delivers clear, appropriate written, spoken, presented messages Relationships : Builds relationships to foster trust, collaboration, and a positive climate to achieve. Physical requirements and Working conditions: Consistent with its obligations under the law, the University will provide reasonable accommodation to any employee with a disability who requires accommodation to perform the essential functions of his or her job. Work standards: Interpersonal Skills: Demonstrates the ability to work well with Stanford colleagues and clients and with external organizations. Promote Culture of Safety: Demonstrates commitment to personal responsibility and value for environment, safety and security; communicates related concerns; uses and promotes safe behaviors based on training and lessons learned. Meets the applicable roles and responsibilities as described in the ESH Manual, Chapter 1-General Policy and Responsibilities: http://www-group.slac.stanford.edu/esh/eshmanual/pdfs/ESHch01.pdf Subject to and expected to comply with all applicable University policies and procedures, including but not limited to the personnel policies and other policies found in the University's Administrative Guide, http://adminguide.stanford.edu As an organization that receives federal funding, SLAC and Stanford University have a COVID-19 vaccination requirement that will apply to all university employees, including those working remotely in the United States and applicable subcontractors. To learn more about COVID policies and guidelines for Stanford University Staff, please visit https://cardinalatwork.stanford.edu/working-stanford/covid-19/interim-policies/covid-19-surveillance-testing-policy

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Classification Title: Staff Engineer 2

Grade: K

Job code: 0132

Duration: Regular Continuing

The expected pay range for this position is $108,000 to $163,000 per annum. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory/Stanford University provides pay ranges representing its good faith estimate of what the university reasonably expects to pay for a position. The pay offered to a selected candidate will be determined based on factors such as (but not limited to) the scope and responsibilities of the position, the qualifications of the selected candidate, departmental budget availability, internal equity, geographic location and external market pay for comparable jobs.

Pay Rate:

Unspecified

HR. Website URL:

https://erp-hprdext.erp.slac.stanford.edu/psc/hprdext/EMPLOYEE/SL_CG/c/HRS_HRAM_FL.HRS_CG_SEARCH_FL.GBL?Page=HRS_APP_SCHJOB_FL&Action=U

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About SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

As one of 17 Department of Energy national labs, SLAC pushes the frontiers of human knowledge and drives discoveries that benefit humankind. We invent the tools that make those discoveries possible and share them with researchers all over the world. X-rays Reveal the Atomic World Our 2-mile-long particle accelerator is the lab’s backbone. Once the scene of major discoveries in particle physics, today it generates the world’s brightest X-rays for our revolutionary X-ray laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Thousands of researchers come to SLAC to use LCLS and the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource to probe matter in atomic detail. These X-ray studies help scientists understand the fundamental workings of nature and find solutions to real-world problems. Fundamental Science, Practical Benefits When researchers delve into basic details of the world around us, practical benefits often follow. This is true of research at SLAC. In chemistry, “molecular movies” made with our X-ray laser are capturing all the tiny steps of chemical reactions for the first time. This new understanding will help improve reactions that give us fuels, fertilizers and a host of other products. In biology, X-rays reveal how proteins – one of the key molecules of life – function in our bodies and in nature. This research has contributed to the development of medications for melanoma, flu and HIV and is aiding the fight against COVID-19, Ebola, high blood pressure and other ills. SLAC studies of exotic materials with quirky traits could have a profound impact on society, although it may be far in the future. Meanwhile, scientists use our X-ray beams for experiments to improve materials for computer chips, jet planes, refinery operations and “smart windows” that automatically adjust the amount of light coming in, to name a few.Even the accelerator technology developed for basic physics experiments has had a huge impact in medicine and industry, where it shrinks tumors, sterilizes medical supplies and hardens materials, among many other things. SLAC researchers are working to make accelerators much smaller and cheaper so they can accomplish even more. Solving Energy Challenges Many threads of SLAC research come together in the quest for clean, sustainable energy sources. We study how plants make energy from sunlight with an eye to doing the same, and customize chemical reactions for generating clean fuels. Our specialized X-ray equipment allows scientists to watch batteries, solar cells and fuel cells in operation, a crucial step in improving how they work. An Eye on the Cosmos SLAC started more than 50 years ago as a place to discover fundamental particles and forces. Today, our researchers still explore the universe at the largest and smallest scales. At the tiniest scale, we help search for new particles and forces at the Large Hadron Collider in Europe, where the Higgs boson was discovered. At the most sweeping scale, we’re building the world’s biggest digital camera for the widest, deepest survey of the night sky ever undertaken. Our longstanding expertise in building particle detectors is being put to use in experiments that search for dark matter and dark energy, probe the secrets of ghostly neutrinos, look for signs of cosmic inflation and capture high-energy particles from the most violent events in the universe. Key Partnerships Stanford University operates SLAC for the DOE Office of Science. Our five joint research centers and facilities with Stanford focus on cosmology and astrophysics, materials and energy science, catalysis, ultrafast science and cryogenic electron microscopy. SLAC’s location in Silicon Valley and our connections with DOE, Stanford and other leading research centers speed our progress. We also look for ways to work with industry to solve problems and spread the benefits of research out into society.

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