Mission operations engineer / flight controller
- Pubblicato il 07/07/2026
- Sant'ambrogio di torino (TO)
- Da definire
- 144256
Descrizione:
How to Become a Mission Operations Engineer / Flight Controller Sit on console and fly the spacecraft. Typical Journey 4–7 years Bachelor's Salary range (USD): $75,000–$165,000 Responsibilities Flight controllers and mission operations engineers operate spacecraft from the ground — issuing commands, monitoring telemetry, troubleshooting anomalies, and choreographing astronaut activities. Career Path BS in Engineering, Physics, or Computer Science (~4 years) Entry‑level operations role at a prime contractor or agency (e.g., Boeing, L3 Harris, Leidos, Space X) Console qualification (~1 year training) Front‑room operator → lead → flight director (~6 years) Salary at a Glance Entry level (0–3 yrs): $75,000 Mid‑career (4–8 yrs): $115,000 Senior (9+ yrs): $165,000 What You’ll Need Procedure‑loving rule‑follower who can improvise Willingness to do shift work, including overnights Strong systems‑level thinking Ability to write and follow hundreds of documented procedures Shift work tolerance – 24/7 coverage Bad Fit If You want to live somewhere besides Houston, Huntsville, Darmstadt, Pasadena, Hawthorne, Long Beach, or Auckland You can’t pass a security clearance (required for many Do D‑adjacent ops roles) Global Opportunities Employers and agencies hiring for this role outside North America. Europe ESA ESOC – Darmstadt, Germany – controls 25+ ESA spacecraft DLR GSOC – Oberpfaffenhofen – Terra SAR‑X, Tan DEM‑X, En MAP ALTEC S.p. A. – Turin – Italian contribution to Columbus/ISS ground segment and ESOC support India SDSC SHAR – Sriharikota – launch operations control for PSLV, LVM3 ISRO Spacecraft Control Centre – Bengaluru – geostationary satellite operations ISRO MCF – Hassan and Bhopal – 24/7 geostationary operations Japan JAXA USEF – Space Environment Utilization System – ISS payload operations Mitsubishi Electric Mission Operations Group – commercial satellite ops JAXA / NEC joint operations for HAYABUSA‑2 extended mission (DESTINY+) UAE MBRSC Mission Control Centre – Dubai – operated Hope Probe at Mars Yahsat Mission Operations Centre – Abu Dhabi – geostationary satellite fleet Australia CSIRO Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex – supports NASA deep‑space missions Optus Satellite Operations Centre – Sydney – A/B‑series geostationary ops EOS Space Systems – Queanbeyan – space surveillance & satellite laser ranging ops Fleet Space Operations – Adelaide – LEO Io T constellation ops South Korea KARI LEOC – Daejeon – KOMPSAT ops Satrec Initiative Mission Operations – Daejeon – Dubai Sat, Deimos KAI – MUOS satellite ops support Canada MDA Space Operations – Brampton – Radarsat Constellation Mission ops CSA Mission Control – Longueuil – astronaut training support, JWST instrument ops NRCan – Ottawa – Radarsat data acquisition and ops Israel IAI Space Division – Yehud – AMOS geostationary satellite ops Space Com Satellite Operations – Tel Aviv – AMOS series commercial fleet Elbit Systems / Image Sat International – Haifa – EROS Earth observation ops SHOVAL – national space surveillance and mission ops R&D Programs & Universities with Strong Pipelines Texas A&M – USA University of Texas at Austin – USA Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University – BS Spaceflight Operations (USA) Germany – Aerospace Engineering – adjacent to ESOC (Germany) Related Careers 21 career pathways with milestones, salaries, and real astronaut journeys. #J-18808-Ljbffr