Network Specialist 3

Stanford University
Stanford, United States of America
2 days ago

Role details

Contract type
Temporary contract
Employment type
Full-time (> 32 hours)
Working hours
Regular working hours
Languages
English

Job location

Stanford, United States of America

Tech stack

Private Networks
Complex Networks
Systems Theories
Monitoring of Systems
Networking Hardware
Network Architecture
Network Connections
Routing
Server Administration
Network Switches
Data Processing
Scripting (Bash/Python/Go/Ruby)
Connectivity Problems
Firewall Services Module
Network Server

Job description

The Fermi/GALPROP/PAB groups are seeking a Specialized Research Network and Systems Specialist to provide advanced network, server, security, and infrastructure support for a highly specialized research computing environment. This role supports critical research systems, private-network connections, externally accessible servers, building-level network equipment, backup systems, and legacy infrastructure that require specialized technical knowledge beyond standard campus IT support.

The position is responsible for maintaining the reliable and secure operation of complex research and building systems, including specialized servers, network switches, firewall rules, server access controls, APC battery backup and monitoring systems, and private network connections used by the Fermi/GALPROP/PAB environments. The role also provides 24/7 on-call support to help ensure the GLAST and GALPROP clusters remain operational for data processing and for data transferred from SLAC to Stanford from the Fermi satellite. The role requires strong technical judgment, independent troubleshooting, root cause analysis, and the ability to respond quickly when outages, security issues, equipment failures, data-transfer interruptions, or connectivity problems occur.

This position also supports system modernization and long-term infrastructure planning for aging equipment, some of which is mission-critical and difficult to replace. Responsibilities include evaluating hardware and software options, planning upgrades, maintaining documentation, coordinating with central UIT/SUNet, vendors, researchers, and building stakeholders, and ensuring that local technical solutions remain secure, supportable, and aligned with Stanford network architecture.

The role requires hands-on experience with complex network and systems administration, including server maintenance, security monitoring, routing, switching, firewall controls, scripting, automation, and custom technical support for specialized research environments.

Requirements

This is an advanced technical role for a candidate who can work independently, understand complex and non-standard infrastructure, protect externally reachable systems from security threats, maintain research continuity, and provide practical technical leadership in an environment where reliability, cybersecurity, and institutional risk management are essential.

About the company

The W. W. Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory (HEPL), (https://hepl.stanford.edu) founded in 1947 as Stanford's first Independent Laboratory, provides facilities and administrative structure enabling faculty to do research that spans across the boundaries of a single department or school-for example: physics & engineering or physics & biology/medicine. The Independent Laboratory concept, in many ways unique to Stanford, facilitates world-class research and teaching. For its first decade, HEPL's operations centered on accelerator research, though following two distinct lines: high-resolution electron scattering under Robert Hofstadter and meson physics under Wolfgang Panofsky. Hofstadter was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize for his work on nuclear form factors. Panofsky developed the immensely successful two-mile-long accelerator at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (http://www.slac.stanford.edu/) (SLAC), the successor to HEPL accelerators. Other major HEPL programs include: the Free Electron Laser (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-electron_laser) , Gravity Probe B (https://einstein.stanford.edu) , Solar Physics (http://sun.stanford.edu) and the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (https://glast.sites.stanford.edu/about) . In addition, a group of programs are clustered around a broad theme of space physics and astrophysics, which involve collaborations with the Aero-Astro, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics and Mechanical Engineering. HEPL is also home to programs in the field of biomedical physics in general and electro-neural interfaces in particular.

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