Photonics Experimental & Fabrication Engineer

Zero Point Motion
Bristol
2 months ago
Create job alert
What You’ll Do

  • experiment control

This role exists to extract truth from real active photonic systems.

As a Photonics Experimental & Fabrication Engineer, you will build experiments, run automated tests, and analyse large datasets to understand how PICs, lasers, detectors, and nonlinear optical effects actually behave - under bias, noise, drift, and real operating conditions - not how we wish they behaved.


This is not a cleanroom-only role. It is about turning fabrication intuition and experimental rigor into system-level learning.


Role

The Role


You will be deeply hands‑on with active photonic test setups, automated measurement, data analysis, and debugging complex experimental behaviour involving:



  • optical power, phase, and frequency
  • detector noise and bandwidth
  • laser dynamics, stability, and drift
  • nonlinear or bias‑dependent effects

Cleanroom experience is valuable - but your impact here comes from how you design experiments, interrogate data, and extract physical insight, not from running processes.


What You’ll Do

Experimental ownership (active & nonlinear systems)



  • Design, build, and improve experiments involving:

    • lasers and optical sources
    • photodetectors and readout chains
    • active PIC components and biasing
    • nonlinear or power‑dependent effects


  • Run automated wafer-scale and lot-scale measurements
  • Characterise behaviour across:

    • bias points
    • optical power
    • temperature
    • time (drift, ageing, stability).


  • Work late when experiments demand it - then automate so you don’t repeat heroics
  • Invent new experimental or analysis approaches when behaviour is messy or non‑ideal

Data & analysis (non‑negotiable)



  • Analyse large experimental datasets with strong statistical discipline
  • Quantify and separate:

    • noise sources
    • drift mechanisms
    • nonlinearities
    • cross‑coupling effects.


  • Correlate results to:

    • design intent
    • simulation assumptions
    • fabrication and process variation
    • metrology and electrical readout.


  • Write substantial Python for:

    • data processing
    • automation
    • experiment control
    • model validation



Fabrication‑aware insight



  • Use fabrication knowledge to:

    • interpret variation intelligently
    • identify real yield and performance limiters
    • distinguish process effects from physics


  • Avoid the trap of blaming fabrication for lack of understanding
  • Feed insight back into design, simulation, and architecture decisions

Cross‑domain collaboration



  • Work closely with photonics design, process, electronics, FPGA, and systems engineers
  • Ensure experimental results directly inform:

    • design updates
    • simulation models
    • biasing strategies
    • future system architectures



Required Background • You Must Have

  • Strong hands‑on experimental experience with photonic systems, including:

    • lasers
    • photodetectors
    • PICs or fibre‑based waveguides


  • Comfort working with active and bias‑dependent behaviour, not just passive components
  • Fabrication or process‑development experience used analytically
  • Demonstrated Python coding ability beyond trivial scripts
  • Comfort handling large datasets and statistics
  • Comfort with electronics and lab instrumentation
  • Willingness to rapidly upskill in design‑experiment‑system correlation

Experience with nonlinear optics, laser locking, noise characterisation, or optoelectronic readout is a strong plus.


Who This Role Is For

  • Experimentalists who care about how photonic systems actually behave in operation
  • Engineers who enjoy debugging noise, drift, instability, and nonlinear effects
  • People who automate instead of repeating manual work
  • Builders who want to push photonics toward production reality
  • Engineers with high integrity and strong internal standards

What This Role Is Not

  • a cleanroom operator role
  • a passive‑component‑only measurement job
  • a simulation‑first, experiment‑second position
  • a role for manual, spreadsheet‑driven analysis

What Success Looks Like After 6–12 Months

  • Lasers, detectors, and active PICs are characterised across wafers and lots
  • Nonlinearities, noise sources, and drift mechanisms are understood and quantified
  • Experimental results directly drive design, simulation, and biasing updates
  • Measurement, metrology, and electrical data are linked coherently
  • Test infrastructure becomes a competitive advantage
  • Learning cycles around active photonic behaviour are dramatically shorter

Working with us

  • Compensation: Our framework is built on fairness and transparency, with regular reviews to reflect growth and performance.
  • Benefits: Share options, pension, and private medical insurance.
  • Culture: A deep‑tech rocketship backed by leading investors. We’re building breakthrough technology with real commercial impact. Pace is high. Standards are higher.

Zero Point Motion is determined to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are committed to providing a work environment where there’s a zero‑tolerance approach to discrimination, and everyone is treated with respect. Equity, diversity and inclusion are central to our mission, and we strongly encourage candidates of all different backgrounds and identities to apply. If you need assistance or an accommodation due to a disability, please contact us.


#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Photonics Experimental & Fabrication Lab Engineer

Hands-on Photonics Experiment & Data Engineer

Photonics Design & Simulation Engineer

Principal Photonics Architect

PhD Position in 2D Materials as Quantum Sensors

Research Scientist in Solid-State Quantum Emitters

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

New Quantum Computing Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and International Companies Advancing Quantum Careers

Quantum computing is no longer confined to research labs. As companies convert quantum theory into testable products, algorithms, and computing platforms, demand for professionals with quantum knowledge — whether physics, algorithms, software development, or hardware engineering — is rising. In 2026, quantum computing organisations are securing significant funding, industry partnerships, and contracts across sectors such as energy, finance, telecommunications, defence, and healthcare. For candidates exploring opportunities on www.QuantumComputingJobs.co.uk , understanding which employers are hiring now and scaling quantum teams is crucial. This article profiles the new and high‑growth quantum computing employers to watch in 2026, with a specific focus on UK‑based innovators, international firms with UK operations, and leading global quantum organisations.

How Many Quantum Computing Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Quantum Computing Job?

Quantum computing is one of the most exciting frontiers in science and technology — and the job market reflects that excitement. But for aspiring practitioners, the sheer number of tools, frameworks, programming languages and hardware platforms can feel overwhelming. One job advert mentions Qiskit, another talks about Cirq or Pennylane. You see references to quantum annealers and superconducting qubits, to measurement hardware and simulators, to noise mitigation libraries and cloud platforms. It’s easy to conclude that unless you master every quantum tool, you’ll never get a job. Here’s the honest truth most quantum computing hiring managers won’t explicitly tell you: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can apply the right tools to solve real problems and explain why your solutions work. Tools matter, but context, understanding, judgement and results matter more. So how many quantum computing tools do you actually need to know to succeed in a job search? The real answer is significantly fewer than most people assume — and far more focused by role. This article breaks down what tools really matter in quantum jobs, which ones are core, which are role-specific, and how you can build a coherent toolkit that employers actually value.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Quantum Computing Job Applications (UK Guide)

Quantum computing is one of the fastest-evolving fields in technology, blending physics, mathematics, computer science and engineering. Roles in this space — from Quantum Algorithm Developer and Quantum Software Engineer to Quantum Research Scientist and Quantum Hardware Specialist — are highly sought after, and hiring managers are exceptionally selective. Because quantum computing is complex and multidisciplinary, recruiters and hiring managers look for clear, concrete evidence of relevant expertise and impact right at the start of your application. They often decide whether to read your CV in detail within the first 10–20 seconds, based on a handful of high-value signals. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in quantum computing applications, how they assess CVs and portfolios, and what you can do to optimise your application to get noticed in the UK quantum job market.