thank you again for telling me your story; this was helpful; however, as you might know the world of physics is now full of people who say that they prefer to do their PhDs in something more marketable rather than (particle-astro-cosmological physics) or astronomy because they simply can work in...
actually, I like astrophysics personally; however, many people advice me not to go for astronomy/astrophysics programs simply because they are saturated fields and I might not end up doing something related to physics or physical sciences or even doing research in which is the primary reason for...
thank you for your response. Can you tell me what were your career opportunities after graduation? I mean do you work (or do research) in your area or you do something completely different? In other words, did you use your degree to some sort of job?
thanks for your response. Actually, I am completely familiar with these subfields, but I’m not sure which one has the most active ongoing research. Perhaps that’s why I’m worried about the future possibilities and research positions.
thank you for your responses; however, I want to know which area will have an ongoing active research within next decades (because I want to be involved in the research as well).
Hi everyone; I have a question, and I hope you could answer it. Well, I have a bachelor degree in physics/computer science and I plan to go to a graduate physics program; however, I don’t know which subfield is good for me. I was looking for computational astrophysics, computational condensed...