Systems Integration & Commissioning Engineer - UK-044

Oxford Ionics
Oxford, United Kingdom
Last month
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Advanced Systems Engineer - 680

Quantinuum United States
US$128,000 – US$161,000 pa

Head of Systems Delivery

Quantum Motion London, United Kingdom
Permanent

Senior QPU Evaluation Scientist - UK-007

Oxford Ionics Oxford, United Kingdom

Staff Quantum Physicist - System Operations - IONQ-987

Oxford Ionics Basel, Basel City

System Integration Senior Manager - UK-079

Oxford Ionics Oxford, United Kingdom

Lead Systems Engineer - Laser Specialist 622

Quantinuum United States
US$148,000 – US$186,000 pa
Posted
5 Mar 2026 (Last month)

Quantum is now, and it's built here.

Oxford Ionics, now part of IonQ, is pioneering the next generation of quantum computing. Using our world-leading trapped-ion technology, we’re building the most powerful, accurate and reliable quantum systems to tackle problems that today’s supercomputers cannot solve.

Joining Oxford Ionics means becoming part of a global IonQ team that is transforming the future of quantum technology - faster, at scale, and with real world impact.

What to expect:

Core to our mission is scaling quantum compute devices and systems in a technologically realistic and cost-effective way. We are looking for aSystems Integration & Commissioning Engineerto work at our Oxford headquarters as part of the team responsible for the hands-on implementation, integration, and repeatable build of our lab-based AMO subsystems.

This role is explicitly focused on execution and reliability: joining an existing project, owning the implementation, solving tricky build issues, and improving the process each time we build. (This is distinct from design-heavy R&D roles.)

What you’ll be responsible for:

In this position, you will work on building and integrating AMO / laser-optics-heavy systems, ensuring they can be assembled, debugged, commissioned, and improved repeatedly. You will help define what “good” looks like for a build, create repeatable integration flows, and perform practical troubleshooting with minimal supervision.

You’ll have the opportunity to reduce build pain, accelerate commissioning, improve reliability, and establish the processes/trackers that make complex lab systems repeatable.

Key responsibilities include:

  • Inspection and verification of subsystems/components at various stages of build using appropriate tools and measurements (e.g., optical inspection/metrology, performance checks, diagnostic measurements).
  • Preparation of parts and assemblies before and after integration, including careful cleaning/handling processes in a lab environment (where relevant).
  • Organisation of packaging/integration activities with 3rd party suppliers, working closely with internal owners (e.g., optics, packaging, electronics) for new development and build turnarounds.
  • Clear reporting of build metrics such as build status, commissioning progress, repeat issues, and reliability trends.
  • Preparation of test assemblies and samples, including small-scale mounting, cabling, fibre handling/alignment where applicable, and support of in-house build-enablement steps.
  • Organisation of the BOM required to complete builds (e.g., optics parts, mounts/hardware, cables, PCBs/substrates as needed, fibres and related components), ensuring builds are not blocked by missing items.
  • Pre-deployment testing / commissioning and failure analysis: set up repeatable checks, diagnose faults, drive issues to resolution, and capture learnings so the next build is easier.
  • Work cross-functionally with system scientists, engineers, and technicians to translate design intent into robust implementation, procedures, and repeatable integration flows.

Requirements

To be successful, you will need strong foundations in experimental AMO physics and hands-on lab build experience; particularly with laser optics. We’re looking for someone who can solve practical problems, work across teams and suppliers, and take a system from “in-progress build” to “commissioned and repeatable”.

You’d be a great fit with:

  • AMO / experimental physics background, with strong optics/laser experience.
  • Evidence you can define build/integration flows, troubleshoot independently, and apply clear technical thinking in a hands-on environment.
  • Comfort working with both internal and external stakeholders / suppliers, keeping complex builds moving.
  • One of the following experience profiles:
    • Master’s + 3+ years highly relevant hands-on experience, or
    • Relevant PhD, or
    • Adjacent PhD + ~1 year relevant industry/lab training.

Useful extras (strong plus): commissioning experience, electronics/instrumentation, programming/scripting.

Desirable skills (nice to have):

  • Exposure to cryo-adjacent hardware integration or working around cryogenic constraints.
  • Experience with precision assembly techniques and careful lab build practices.
  • Familiarity with PCB technologies / supply chain and practical build logistics.

Benefits

Be part of a team that’s shaping the future of quantum. We offer more than just a role, you’ll join a world class community of scientists, engineers and innovators working to unlock the full potential of quantum computing.

We offer a range of benefits, including opportunities to further your career alongside industry leaders, a competitive salary with IonQ stock options, an annual performance bonus, generous annual leave, flexible hybrid working, private medical and dental insurance for you and your family, and much more.

Join us and be part of the future of quantum computing.

We’re proud to be an equal opportunity employer and welcome applicants from all backgrounds.

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.

Where to Advertise Quantum Computing Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising quantum computing jobs in the UK requires a fundamentally different approach to most technical hiring. The global talent pool is tiny — measured in thousands, not tens of thousands — and concentrated around a small number of university physics departments, national laboratories and well-funded hardware startups. Many of the strongest candidates hold PhDs in quantum physics, quantum information or adjacent disciplines and are embedded in academic or research communities that rarely intersect with mainstream job boards. General platforms are largely ineffective for quantum hiring. Specialist boards, academic channels and direct community outreach are not optional extras — they are the primary sourcing strategy. This guide, published by QuantumComputingJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise quantum computing roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

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.