I want to study cosmology, which university should i apply ?

In summary, the individual is looking to study cosmology and is considering applying to universities with strong programs in this field. They are not qualified for the top 20 universities and are seeking recommendations for universities ranked from 30 to 100, with a particular interest in physics rankings. They are specifically looking for suggestions for 18 universities in the US and have a GPA of 3.5. The individual has no prior research experience in cosmology and is seeking useful information in this field. They have mentioned a list of potential universities from #26 to #70, with a focus on UC Santa Cruz due to its strong faculty and research in cosmology and early universe astrophysics. They are open to considering other universities and can use Google to
  • #1
yuan_wl
12
0
i want to study cosmology,and i am going to apply this year.
i am not qualified for the top 20 universities' Ph.D program, and i think i should apply some universities ranking from 30 to 100, i mean , ranking of physics, but still strong enough in theory cosmology.
however, i have no idea which universities should i apply. could you recommend me about 18 universities ?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Well it would really help if you told us what country you're applying to. Even in the US, it is probably a rough task to find 20 universities who do cosmology on any serious level in the first place.
 
  • #3
yeah, i am applying to the US only.
 
  • #4
My gpa is 3.5 . and i am not native american.
No related research have been achieved during my undergraduate study. So , i am badly need any useful information in cosmology.
 
  • #5
yuan_wl said:
i want to study cosmology,and i am going to apply this year.
i am not qualified for the top 20 universities' Ph.D program, and i think i should apply some universities ranking from 30 to 100, i mean , ranking of physics, but still strong enough in theory cosmology.
however, i have no idea which universities should i apply. could you recommend me about 18 universities ?

It sounds like you want people to help you pick the strongest cosmology departments from among these:

#26 University of California--Davis 3.6
#26 University of Minnesota 3.6
#30 Brown University 3.5
#30 Carnegie Mellon University 3.5
#30 Duke University 3.5
#30 Georgia Institute of Technology 3.5
#30 Northwestern University 3.5
#30 University of California--Irvine 3.5
#36 Michigan State University 3.4
#36 University of Arizona 3.4
#36 University of Florida 3.4
#36 University of North Carolina--Chapel Hill 3.4
#40 Boston University 3.3
#40 Indiana University--Bloomington 3.3
#40 New York University 3.3
#40 Purdue University 3.3
#40 Texas A&M University 3.3
#40 University of California--Santa Cruz 3.3
#40 University of Virginia 3.3
#40 Washington University in St. Louis 3.3
#48 Arizona State University 3.2
#48 Florida State University--Tallahassee 3.2
#48 Iowa State University--Ames 3.2

and also maybe from these:

#48 University of Massachusetts--Amherst
Worcester, MA

3.2
#52 North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC

3.1
#52 University of California--Riverside
Riverside, CA

3.1
#52 University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA

3.1
#52 University of Rochester
Rochester, NY

3.1
#52 University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA

3.1
#57 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Troy, NY

3.0
#57 University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA

3.0
#57 University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN

3.0
#57 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR

3.0
#57 University of Tennessee--Knoxville
Knoxville, TN

3.0
#57 Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN

3.0
#63 Brandeis University
Waltham, MA

2.9
#63 Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, OH

2.9
#63 CUNY Graduate School and University Center
New York, NY

2.9
#63 Northeastern University
Boston, MA

2.9
#63 Rockefeller University
New York, NY

2.9
#63 University of Utah
Salt Lake City, UT

2.9
#63 Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA

2.9
#70 Colorado State University
Fort Collins, CO

2.8
#70 Dartmouth College
Hanover, NH

2.8
#70 Rochester Institute of Technology
Rochester, NY

2.8
#70 Syracuse University
Syracuse, NY

2.8
#70 University of Connecticut
Storrs, CT

2.8
#70 University of Illinois--Chicago
Chicago, IL

2.8
This is the US News ranking of PHYSICS grad schools as of 2010
http://grad-schools.usnews.rankings...s/top-science-schools/physics-rankings/page+3
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #6
Yeah, thank you so much. it can also involve #70 ~ #120 .
i think some universities do not offer cosmology programs, but i don't know much about US universities.
 
  • #7
#70 University of Nebraska--Lincoln Lincoln, NE

#77 Boston College Chestnut Hill, MA #77 Colorado School of Mines Golden, CO #77 Louisiana State University--Baton Rouge Baton Rouge, LA #77 Oregon State University Corvallis, OR

#77 Tufts University Medford, MA

#77 University of Delaware Newark, DE

#77 University of Georgia Athens, GA

#77 Washington State University Pullman, WA

#85 College of William and Mary Williamsburg, VA

#85 Kansas State University Manhattan, KS

#85 University at Buffalo--SUNY Buffalo, NY

#85 University of Kansas Lawrence, KS

#85 University of Kentucky Lexington, KY

#85 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM

#85 University of Oklahoma Norman, OK

#85 University of Texas--Dallas Richardson , TX

#93 Drexel University Philadelphia, PA

#93 George Washington University Washington, DC

#93 Lehigh University Bethlehem, PA

#93 Montana State University Bozeman, MT

#93 New Mexico State University Las Cruces, NM

#93 Ohio University Athens, OH

#93 Tulane University New Orleans, LA

#93 University of Hawaii--Manoa Honolulu, HI

#93 University of Missouri Columbia, MO

#102 Brigham Young University Provo, UT

#102 Clemson University Clemson, SC

#102 Georgia State University Atlanta, GA

#102 Oklahoma State University Stillwater, OK

#102 Temple University Philadelphia, PA

#102 University at Albany--SUNY Albany, NY

#102 University of Central Florida Orlando, FL

#102 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, OH

#102 University of Houston Houston, TX

#102 University of New Hampshire Durham, NH

#102 University of Wisconsin--Milwaukee Milwaukee, WI

#113 Baylor University Waco, TX

#113 Kent State University Kent, OH

#113 New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Socorro, NM

#113 University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL

#113 University of Alabama--Huntsville Huntsville, AL

#113 University of Arkansas--Fayetteville Fayetteville, AR

#113 University of Nevada--Las Vegas Las Vegas, NV

#113 University of South Carolina Columbia, SC

#113 Wayne State University Detroit, MI

#122 Auburn University Auburn, AL

#122 Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago, IL

#122 Michigan Technological University Houghton, MI

#122 Old Dominion University Norfolk, VA
 
Last edited:
  • #8
Yuan, I would say to eliminate everything in your last post (#7)
and instead focus on the higher ranked schools which are in my post #5,
These are from #26 to #70. Here is a sample:

#26 University of California--Davis 3.6
...
#30 Carnegie Mellon University 3.5
...
#30 University of California--Irvine 3.5
...
#36 University of North Carolina--Chapel Hill 3.4
...
#40 University of California--Santa Cruz 3.3
...
#70 Syracuse University 2.8

Let's just look at one of these: UC Santa Cruz. I wonder if the department is strong in cosmology. I am not an expert and I do not know. But I would guess that UCSC is a good place to do PhD in cosmology.

Well, they have a PhD program in astro
http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/

And I see they have this guy Piero Madau:
http://www.ucolick.org/~pmadau/
"Piero Madau's research interests in the last few years have focused on theoretical cosmology and the high-redshift universe, especially on the physics of the intergalactic medium and the history of star formation in galaxies. At early epochs, the intergalactic medium contains evidence about the epochs of metal production, reionization, and chemical enrichment of the universe, as well as the primordial density fluctuation spectrum of some of the earliest formed cosmological structures."
http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/faculty/profiles/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=pmadau
"Research Interests
My research focuses on theoretical astrophysics and cosmology. Specific topics within these broad areas are: the physics of the intergalactic medium, first light and the dawn of galaxies, high-energy radiation backgrounds, the formation and evolution of massive black holes, the cosmic history of star formation. Other recent interests include the "Via Lactea Project", a suite of extremely high-resolution simulations of the assembly of the dark matter halo of the Milky Way."

this guy might also interest you, Mark Krumhoz:
http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/faculty/profiles/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=mkrumhol
http://www.ucolick.org/~krumholz/

and this guy, David Koo:
http://www.ucolick.org/~koo/home.html [Broken]
http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/faculty/profiles/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=dckoo

and Garth Illingworth:
http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/faculty/profiles/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=gillingw
http://www.ucolick.org/~gdi/
He is a leader in the study of the very earliest galaxies. 13 billion years back in time.

The more I look the more I think that UC Santa Cruz is quite strong in cosmology and early universe astrophysics.

I don't have time to examine other departments. My point is that UCSC is rather far down the ranking, so maybe you could consider it.
It is at rank #40.

You can use google to find out about the astronomy and astrophysics department of any of these universities. That is what I did just now with UC Santa Cruz.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #9
Thank you so much marcus! You helped me much, and I will follow your instructions and find more universities that suit me.
 
  • #10
You are welcome to ask for help in navigating the website of some other university. they are not all set up the same way.

I looked at #30 Carnegie Mellon. Here is how to navigate to the cosmology section, as an example. This is just an example, not a recommendation that CMU is strong in cosmology!

Google "carnegie mellon"
go to CMU website http://www.cmu.edu/
click on ACADEMICS (this is often a good menu word to look for)

Then you get http://www.cmu.edu/academics/
and you see a menu on the left and you click on SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
(these are different parts of CMU, the unversity is divided into pieces like school of this and college of that)
so you click on schools and colleges
http://www.cmu.edu/academics/schools.shtml

You scroll way down the page to "Mellon College of Science" and you see a link to "Physics"

You click on "physics" and this gets the webpage of the Physics Department

On the left there is a menu where you see RESEARCH (this is a good menu word to look for once you have found a Physics Department webpage). You click.

http://www.cmu.edu/physics/research/index.html

Then at last you see, in the menu at the left, the words ASTROPHYSICS AND COSMOLOGY.

You click, and you get
http://www.cmu.edu/physics/research/astrophysics/index.html [Broken]

There will be the names of 5 faculty who do astro&cosmo and a paragraph description of the research of each of the 5 people.

I think Carnegie Mellon University is very strong in some departments like Computer Science and certain kinds of engineering. I have very high respect for CMU. But I do not see that they are especially strong in Cosmology!

Still, it would be all right to apply there, because if you get a PhD from CMU that will be worth something. People respect that because of the overall excellence.

I did this example of web navigation just to show what you have to do to find your way to the astro/cosmo section of the physics department and the description of the faculty member's research interest.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #11
It is so kind of you.
 
  • #12
yuan_wl said:
i think i should apply some universities ranking from 30 to 100, i mean , ranking of physics, but still strong enough in theory cosmology.

Physics universities in the US don't work by rankings. This can work against you, because if you don't have a solid undergraduate background, you will find it difficult to get in anywhere.
 
  • #13
twofish-quant said:
Physics universities in the US don't work by rankings. This can work against you, because if you don't have a solid undergraduate background, you will find it difficult to get in anywhere.

My academic scores is ok, but i did research work in condensed matter. I don't know what kind of perspective students the US universities want to be , I really have passion in cosmology, and will dedicate to it .
 
  • #14
yuan_wl said:
My academic scores is ok, but i did research work in condensed matter.

Everything is connected to everything else, so a lot of condensed matter research turns out to be important in cosmology.

I don't know what kind of perspective students the US universities want to be , I really have passion in cosmology, and will dedicate to it .

Don't be so sure. Most people that don't have strong experience with cosmology really don't have that much of an idea of what it involves. You do need to keep your options open, and if you spend the first year of your Ph.D., it's OK to find out that you really don't like cosmology once you find out what it is really about.
 
  • #15
yuan_wl said:
i am not qualified for the top 20 universities' Ph.D program,

If you're not qualified for a Top 20 program (as opposed to guessing you won't be admitted), you're probably not qualified for any programs. The difference between qualifications is small or nonexistent.
 
  • #16
Vanadium 50 said:
If you're not qualified for a Top 20 program (as opposed to guessing you won't be admitted), you're probably not qualified for any programs. The difference between qualifications is small or nonexistent.

My concerning lies in the toefl scores. Most top universities need a high score, but i have not mastered English very well. So, will it be questionable ?
 
  • #17
Plus, will they recruit new students only when bearing research experience ?
 
  • #18
Harvard and Southern Methodist University both require an 80 on the TOEFL. If you don't get your scores up, you likely won't be getting in anywhere.
 
  • #19
Thank you VAnadium, then you mean i can apply all the universities across the US, or none of them? so, I should not pay attention to the rankings, and just find the places suit me ?
 
  • #20
yuan_wl said:
so, I should not pay attention to the rankings, and just find the places suit me ?

Yes. But you should also work on getting your TOEFL scores up.
 
  • #21
En, I have studied English for several months and took the toefl test again a couple of days ago. I hope I can get a better score this time.
When people apply, some ones are more competitive than others, and these applicants may aim at top universities. If I also apply to , for example, Princeton, would I be eliminated because other students who apply the same university much better than me ? I have misused the word "qualified", I think most of us are qualified, but some of us are "more qualified", and these applicants may occupy most of the positions.
 

1. What is cosmology and why is it important to study?

Cosmology is the scientific study of the origin and evolution of the universe. It helps us understand the fundamental laws of nature and the structure of the universe. Studying cosmology can also lead to advancements in technology and a deeper understanding of our place in the universe.

2. What universities offer programs in cosmology?

There are many universities around the world that offer programs in cosmology, including top institutions such as Princeton University, University of Cambridge, and University of California, Berkeley. It is important to research and compare different programs to find the best fit for your academic and career goals.

3. What are the prerequisites for studying cosmology at the university level?

Most universities require students to have a strong background in physics and mathematics, as well as coursework in astronomy and astrophysics. Some programs may also require proficiency in computer programming and data analysis.

4. Are there any specific skills or qualities that are helpful for studying cosmology?

Some important skills for studying cosmology include critical thinking, problem-solving, and the ability to work independently and collaboratively. A strong interest in physics, astronomy, and mathematics is also crucial, as well as a curiosity about the unknown and an open-minded approach to scientific inquiry.

5. What are the career opportunities for someone with a degree in cosmology?

There are a variety of career paths for those with a degree in cosmology, including research positions in academia, government agencies, and private companies. Other opportunities may include science communication, science education, or roles in the aerospace industry. Graduates may also choose to pursue further education in fields such as astrophysics, astronomy, or data science.

Similar threads

Replies
115
Views
6K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
2
Views
563
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
778
  • STEM Academic Advising
2
Replies
49
Views
3K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
12
Views
342
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
10
Views
1K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
10
Views
2K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
22
Views
1K
Back
Top