View Full Version : Can i still be an astrophysicist
abbeynewton
Feb19-11, 03:48 PM
Hello,
I am in my final year, studying geophysics, but i have always loved astronomy and physics. Because of some circumstances(which is a very long story), i could not study astrophysics. Can i do masters in astrophysics even with my B.Sc in Geophysics, and if not what can i do to study it. My school does not offer any program on any space related subject, as a matter of fact no school in my country offers it(I am from Nigeria). So i don't have any basic or formal education on astronomy. So what can i do?
While you may have to play catchup with a few courses, I don't think that switch would be impossible. What physics courses have you taken? You should have covered the basics, anyway.
The best way to figure out how doable it is is to contact a potential graduate program and ask. It can't hurt.
abbeynewton
Feb19-11, 04:54 PM
hello G01,
just to be on the safe side can you please list the physics courses that i should study to be an astrophysicist excluding maths methods and areas i should pay more attention, and a good university in US(and or UK) that is acknowledged with this field
Hi abbey,
I'm not an astrophysicist or a geophysicist, just a plain old boring physicist! So, I haven't been through an astrophysicist curriculum so I can only tell you what the important physics courses are. I have no insight into astronomy specific courses. The best bet is to check an astronomy departments web page as see what the undergrads need to take.
For instance:
http://www.villanova.edu/artsci/astronomy/undergrad/major.htm
My best guess is that you will have most of the physics requirements filled, but will be missing the astronomy specific courses. However, you can probably play catchup in grad school with the astronomy courses, as you'll still have all the fundamentals.
abbeynewton
Feb23-11, 02:13 AM
thanks GO1. the site was helpful
abbeynewton
Feb23-11, 02:17 AM
if i want to apply for an undergraduate program in astrophysics, how many years will it take to complete it in US
mal4mac
Feb23-11, 09:17 AM
There were many people with 'just' physics degrees on the MSc Astronomy course I took at Sussex University in the UK. That was some years ago, but they are still saying "no previous astronomy needed". Prep. ideas here:
http://astronomy.sussex.ac.uk/~loveday/astroPrep.html
abbeynewton
Feb23-11, 09:32 AM
thanks mal4mac, the link was very helpful...may consider studying at sussex university.
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