Your responsibilities
As a Junior Electrical Engineer, within the Beams Department, you will join the BE-EA-EC cabling team to work on projects for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and CERN's experiments. The teams scope is to optimise and maintain the infrastructure and provide strong support to the physicists.
In this position, you will support the team leader and engineering team with studying, executing and coordinating complex technical cabling.
Specifically, you will:
Your profile
Skills and/or knowledge
Professional experience in the electrical domain; Initial experience with Industry standards and Electrical Safety Systems; Experience using related electrical software packages would be an advantage; Ability to manage several activities simultaneously and meet tight deadlines;Good writing skills; Fluent in English, the ability to work in French would be an advantage.Eligibility criteria:
You are a national of a CERN Member or Associate Member State.By the application deadline, you have a maximum of two years of professional experience since graduation in Electrical Engineering (or a related field) and your highest educational qualification is either a Bachelor's or Master's degree.You have never had a CERN fellow or graduate contract before.Applicants without University degree are not eligible.Applicants with a PhD are not eligible.Job closing date: 10.10.2024 at 23:49h (midnight) CEST.
Job reference: BE-EA-EC-2024-143-GRAE
Contract duration: 24 months, with a possible extension up to 36 months maximum.
Target start date: 01-November-2024
What we offer
A monthly stipend ranging between 5134 and 5647 Swiss Francs (net of tax).Coverage by CERN's comprehensive health scheme (for yourself, your spouse and children), and membership of the CERN Pension Fund.Depending on your individual circumstances: installation grant; family, child and infant allowances; payment of travel expenses at the beginning and end of contract.30 days of paid leave per year.On-the-job and formal training at CERN as well as in-house language courses for English and/or French.About us
At CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, physicists and engineers are probing the fundamental structure of the universe. Using the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments, they study the basic constituents of matter - fundamental particles that are made to collide together at close to the speed of light. The process gives physicists clues about how particles interact, and provides insights into the fundamental laws of nature. Find out more on http://home.cern.
Diversity has been an integral part of CERN's mission since its foundation and is an established value of the Organization. Employing a diverse workforce is central to our success.