FPGA Verification & Control Systems Engineer
At Zero Point Motion, the FPGA is not glue logic.
It is a core part of the sensing system.
This role exists to design, verify, and operate real-time digital systems that directly interact with physical reality: MEMS motion, photonic signals, noise, timing, and control loops.
If you think of FPGA work as abstract RTL design, this role is not for you.
If you think of digital systems as applied mathematics implemented in silicon, it might be.
The Role
As an FPGA / Digital Systems Engineer, you own real-time digital control and signal processing that directly interfaces with MEMS and photonic hardware.
Your work directly determines lock stability, noise floors, measurement fidelity, and whether demos succeed or fail.
This is a hands-on role. Verification quality, timing discipline, and physical intuition matter more than clever architectures. If you write the code, you own proving that it is correct.
The role sits close to R&D: the FPGA is part of discovering system truth, not just implementing a frozen design.
What You’ll Do
Digital control & signal processing
Design, implement, and verify FPGA systems interfacing with photonic sensors, MEMS devices, and high-speed ADCs/DACs
Implement and stabilise real-time systems such as:
PLLs
AGC
nested feedback loops
quadrature demodulation
force-to-rebalance control
Reason explicitly about timing, latency, jitter, phase noise, quantisation, and numerical stability
Digital ↔ physical reasoning
Translate mathematical models and control theory into discrete-time digital implementations
Understand how RTL decisions affect mechanical motion, optical phase, thermal drift, and noise coupling
Treat the FPGA as part of the physical system, not an isolated digital block
Hardware interfaces & IO
Implement and debug SPI, I²C, UART, GPIO, and high-speed ADC/DAC interfaces
Design safe clock-domain crossings intentionally
Build reliable data logging and streaming under real-time constraints
Verification & observability (non-negotiable)
Build proper verification environments:
structured testbenches
assertions tied to invariants
deterministic stimuli
quantitative pass/fail metrics
Verification must be automated, repeatable, and explainable
Eyeballing oscilloscope traces is not verification
Design for observability with internal instrumentation and clear failure modes
Tooling, lab work & data
Write clean, disciplined RTL (Verilog / SystemVerilog)
Use Python as a first-class tool for test automation, bring-up, verification support, and data analysis
Be fluent with lab instrumentation and understand their limitations, not just their outputs
Required Background
You must have:
Strong fundamentals in digital design and real-time systems
Solid grounding in control theory or signal processing
Hands-on experience bringing up FPGA designs on real hardware
Experience implementing and verifying control loops, PLLs, or equivalent feedback systems
Comfort working at the boundary between digital logic, analog signals, and physical systems
High personal standards around correctness, verification, and documentation
Experience with ASIC flows is a plus, not a requirement
Who This Role Is For
This role is not for:
MATLAB-first engineers
simulation-only designers
FPGA developers who avoid lab work
people who “verify” by visual inspection
engineers uncomfortable with noise, timing, or pressure
What This Role Is Not
This is not:
a pure web, SaaS, or framework-driven role
a narrowly scoped backend position
a job for people who only write one-off scripts and move on
a place for over-abstracted code no one can debug
a role for people who wait for perfect specifications
How You Show Up
You are motivated by the underlying mathematics, not just by making something work
You do not ship what you cannot explain
You treat verification as a core engineering discipline
You communicate clearly, especially under pressure
You design margins so systems work without heroics
What Success Looks Like
After 6–12 months:
FPGA-based control loops are stable, low-noise, and explainable
Verification is trusted because it is systematic and repeatable
Timing closure is boring because it was designed correctly
Demos work because margins exist, not because of last-minute tuning
Bugs are found early and are diagnosable when they do occur
The FPGA is a transparent, instrumented part of the system - not a black box
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.
- Department
- Technical
- Locations
- Bristol
About Zero Point Motion
Join Zero Point Motion and help redefine sensing at the intersection of hardware, photonics, and AI. Shape the future with real-world impact.
Already working at Zero Point Motion?
Let’s recruit together and find your next colleague.