relativity

Power Systems Engineer II – Launch & Recovery

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At a Glance

Location
United States
Posted
2026-02-18T11:42:15-05:00

Key Requirements

Domain Knowledge

  • Aerospace
  • Construction
  • Engineering
  • Government

Requirements

Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering or a related field.

Professional experience in the marine or construction industry working with electrical systems, including a combination of analysis/design, field implementation, project management, and project execution.

Experience applying electrical engineering principles to projects in industrial or infrastructure environments.

Ability to work effectively with multidisciplinary teams and manage multiple priorities.

Nice to have:

Compensation & Benefits

$117,000

$150,000 USD

We are an equal opportunity employer and value diversity at our company. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, or disability status.

If you need a reasonable accommodation, please contact us at

accommodations@relativityspace.com

Responsibilities

Lead electrical project construction activities for launch and at sea recovery facilities

Work on electrical systems across voltages ranging from 22.5 kV to 120 V

Support power generation and control, power distribution and protection, fault recovery, and sequencing operations for the Relativity Space recovery vessel that the booster will land on after launch

This position will be expected to travel with the recovery vessel for rocket launch recovery and booster securing

Develop construction drawings, requests for proposals, bid packages, bid evaluations, subcontractor selection, and subcontractor management

Design electrical systems and provide design requirements for other disciplines, including work in hazardous and marine environments

Team

The Launch team operates at the intersection of every major aspect of Terran R, from stages and payloads to ground systems, launch, landing, and refurbishment. The Cape is the only place where you see it all come together, offering a level of exposure and responsibility unmatched elsewhere in the program. This is where first flights happen, where history is built on top of history, and where the scale of what's underway is unlike anything in modern aerospace. The mission stays the same, but the work evolves with every milestone: from first launch to reuse, high-cadence operations, and beyond. If you're looking to define what's next in space launch and write a new playbook, not just repeat what’s already been done, this is where it happens.