ENCYRCLE Research Assistant
| Posting date: | 06 January 2026 |
|---|---|
| Salary: | £34,132 to £38,249 per year |
| Hours: | Full time |
| Closing date: | 01 February 2026 |
| Location: | Swansea, Wales |
| Remote working: | On-site only |
| Company: | Swansea University |
| Job type: | Contract |
| Job reference: | SU01367 |
Summary
The ENCYRCLE project is looking for an enthusiastic research assistant to join the Swansea University project team. You will be part of a £2 million research initiative with the Wales-based National Data Exploitation Centre (NDEC), part of global technology leader Thales, to strengthen the cyber resilience of interconnected systems, including those in transport.
Cyber resilience concerns a system's ability to continuously deliver intended outcomes despite adverse cyber events. In ENCYRCLE, modelling and verification shall inform the engineering of system updates designed to recover affected services without endangering the delivery of other (unaffected) services. One trigger of such updates is the need to replace cryptosystems by quantum-safe ones, a change that, e.g., NCSC encourages to carry out from 2028 onwards.
You will be developing a SysML-based specification language for cyber resilience design and analysis. It is a strength of SysML that it is not fixed to a specific tool for verification and validation. The idea is to `connect' SysML to tools. This allows to utilise the `best' tools for the desired analyses. Besides developing a suitable SysML profile and tool support for it, you will also design model transformations into the input language of analysis tools such as simulators, model-checkers, and theorem provers. The resulting tool chain shall be demonstrated in a case study from the automotive sector.
The modelling work package in ENCYCRLE is led by Professor Markus Roggenbach, who is head of the Cyber Security Group at Swansea. This research project is aligned with the UK Government’s strategy and its results will directly inform industry best practice, guidance, and will contribute to resilient engineering systems and infrastructure. The impact of this work will directly inform guidance and principles underpinning the design of critical national infrastructures and complex engineering systems in a range of sectors.
Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
The University is committed to supporting and promoting equality and diversity in all its practices and activities. We aim to establish an inclusive environment and welcome diverse applications from the following protected characteristics: age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race (including colour, nationality, ethnic and national origin), religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation.
As an inclusive and welcoming workplace, we value people for their skills regardless of their background. Applications are welcome in Welsh and will not be treated less favourably than those submitted in English.
Cyber resilience concerns a system's ability to continuously deliver intended outcomes despite adverse cyber events. In ENCYRCLE, modelling and verification shall inform the engineering of system updates designed to recover affected services without endangering the delivery of other (unaffected) services. One trigger of such updates is the need to replace cryptosystems by quantum-safe ones, a change that, e.g., NCSC encourages to carry out from 2028 onwards.
You will be developing a SysML-based specification language for cyber resilience design and analysis. It is a strength of SysML that it is not fixed to a specific tool for verification and validation. The idea is to `connect' SysML to tools. This allows to utilise the `best' tools for the desired analyses. Besides developing a suitable SysML profile and tool support for it, you will also design model transformations into the input language of analysis tools such as simulators, model-checkers, and theorem provers. The resulting tool chain shall be demonstrated in a case study from the automotive sector.
The modelling work package in ENCYCRLE is led by Professor Markus Roggenbach, who is head of the Cyber Security Group at Swansea. This research project is aligned with the UK Government’s strategy and its results will directly inform industry best practice, guidance, and will contribute to resilient engineering systems and infrastructure. The impact of this work will directly inform guidance and principles underpinning the design of critical national infrastructures and complex engineering systems in a range of sectors.
Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
The University is committed to supporting and promoting equality and diversity in all its practices and activities. We aim to establish an inclusive environment and welcome diverse applications from the following protected characteristics: age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race (including colour, nationality, ethnic and national origin), religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation.
As an inclusive and welcoming workplace, we value people for their skills regardless of their background. Applications are welcome in Welsh and will not be treated less favourably than those submitted in English.