Guidance & Control Software Engineer

Unify
Mill Hill, Greater London, CR4 1HD, United Kingdom
Last month
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Embedded Software Engineer – Autonomous Systems (UAS/Robotics)

YT Technologies Bristol, United Kingdom

Advanced Systems Engineer (Cockpit & Cabin)

Vertical Aerospace Bristol, BS1 3BF, United Kingdom
Permanent

Flight Test Instrumentation Technician

Vertical Aerospace Cotswold, United Kingdom
Permanent

Flight Test Instrumentation Technician

Vertical Aerospace Cotswold, United Kingdom
Permanent

Powerplant Technician

Windracers Fareham, Hampshire, United Kingdom
On-site

Standard Parts & Materials Component Engineer

Vertical Aerospace Bristol, BS1 3BF, United Kingdom
Permanent
Posted
20 Feb 2026 (Last month)

Guidance & Control Software Engineer (Interception Systems)
Location: North London - Hybrid
Type: Contract - Outside IR35
Rate: Starting at £50 per hour DOE

About the Role

Our client develops advanced autonomous weapon and interception technologies designed for high-speed target engagement in contested environments.

The programme centres on a vision-guided one-way aerial system capable of autonomously detecting, tracking, and intercepting manoeuvring objects. The software architecture combines real-time perception with predictive guidance and control.

This role will be central to the development of the onboard flight and guidance stack, implementing estimation, tracking and control algorithms in performance-critical C++ code. The engineer will work closely with perception, simulation and hardware teams to ensure reliable terminal behaviour under real-world conditions.

The Guidance & Control Software Engineer position suits an engineer with experience in missile guidance, air defence, seekers, or high-dynamic autonomous vehicles rather than conventional UAV autopilot development.

Key Responsibilities

Guidance & Control

Develop predictive guidance and control algorithms for autonomous interception

Implement proportional navigation, pursuit guidance or equivalent terminal control laws

Design trajectory prediction and time-to-impact logic for manoeuvring targets

Integrate perception outputs into stable closed-loop control behaviour

Tune and validate behaviour across dynamic envelopes and degraded sensing conditions

Estimation & Tracking

Develop state estimation and tracking filters (e.g. Kalman based approaches)

Handle uncertain and intermittent measurement data

Fuse onboard sensors and vision-derived measurements

Prevent divergence and oscillatory behaviour in terminal phase

Software Implementation

Implement real-time flight software in modern C++

Optimise performance for embedded compute constraints

Support hardware-in-the-loop and simulation environments

Work with safety-critical and deterministic execution constraints

Integration & Testing

Collaborate with perception and simulation engineers

Analyse flight logs and engagement performance

Support ground and flight trials

Debug instability, tracking loss, and intercept miss distance issues

Behaviours

Analytical and physics-driven problem solving

Comfortable working with incomplete or ambiguous data

Collaborative across perception, hardware and systems teams

Pragmatic and delivery focused

Ownership mindset with strong accountability

Calm under test and trial pressure

Qualifications and Experience

Strong C++ experience in embedded or real-time systems

Background in guidance, navigation and control, tracking, or estimation

Experience with high dynamic autonomous or weapon systems

Understanding of control laws and dynamic stability

Experience working with real sensor data rather than purely simulated environments

Familiarity with modelling or simulation environments desirable

Knowledge of vision-based navigation or target tracking beneficial

Degree in Aerospace Engineering, Control Systems, Robotics, Physics, Mathematics or similar

Eligibility to work on defence related programmes in the UK (SC Cleared / 5 years residency in the UK)

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 UAV Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising UAV jobs in the UK requires a different approach to most technical hiring. The candidate pool spans aeronautical engineers, embedded systems developers, flight control specialists, RF engineers, payload integration experts and regulatory affairs professionals — a highly specific multidisciplinary mix that general job boards are poorly equipped to reach. The strongest UAV candidates often come from defence backgrounds, aerospace primes or academic research groups, and move between roles through specialist networks, industry events and sector-specific channels rather than mainstream platforms. This guide, published by UAVJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise UAV and drone 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 UAV Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and Global Companies Powering Drone and Autonomous Aviation Careers

Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones, are transforming how industries operate — from delivery and inspection to defence, agriculture, and emergency response. As regulations evolve and technology matures, demand for skilled professionals with expertise in UAV systems, autonomy, robotics, perception, and safety is rising rapidly. For individuals exploring roles on www.UAVJobs.co.uk , knowing which organisations are innovating, scaling, winning contracts, or investing in the UK market can make a critical difference when planning your career. This article highlights the top UAV employers to watch in 2026, from cutting‑edge UK startups to global drone innovators with growing UK operations.

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

If you’re aiming for a role in the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry, it can feel like every job advert expects you to know a never-ending list of tools: flight control systems, autopilot frameworks, simulation platforms, sensor suites, communication stacks, mission planning software, GIS tools — and on it goes. With so many names and acronyms, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed and assume you must learn every tool under the sun before you’ll be taken seriously by employers. Here’s the honest truth most UAV hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can use the right tools to solve real UAV problems safely, reliably and in context. Tools matter — absolutely — but they always serve a purpose: solving problems, reducing risk, improving performance, or guiding safer operations. So the real question isn’t how many tools you should know — it’s: which tools you should master, in what context, and why. This article breaks down what employers actually expect, which tools are essential, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so you look credible, confident and job-ready.