What Career Paths Await an Aspiring Astrophysicist After University?

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In summary: Manoj mentioned. As for your question of where to work after university, it sounds like you will have to research this yourself- a few places to start looking might be universities or research institutes with astrophysics or cosmology programs, or maybe private companies where the research is profitable but not purely scientific.
  • #1
Astro's
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Hello everyone right now I am studying in Middle school and next year I am going to Highschool, I've been into this whole Astro"Physics, Nomy, cosmology" thing and seriously I've been planing to study this as my career. I've search many universities around the world and I've seen as Waterloo in Canada as an option. But I'm not quite sure because when I am done with university were am i going to work? MIT? or maybe a research place. I am not to sure for this career and on my school Physics and Maths are my best courses cause I am good at. But i need deep answers about this career and what chances I've got as an Astrophysicst in the future. Thanks
 
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  • #2
Hello >Astro's<,

I'm from the U.S. and in my country, while it will definitely be possible for you (given that you are able to deal the academic rigor required of those in these fields) to eventually work as a post-doc researcher, if you want to become a tenured professor in any of these fields the road is very hard, narrow, and long.

I recently spoke with Dr. Manoj Kaplinghat who is a cosmologist at my University, and he estimated that there were about 10 openings annually in academic faculty positions of his specific field in the U.S. per year. That's in a country of 310 million people, with the largest and best-funded research universities in the world. He further speculated that there were approximately 50 openings annually in fields related to his, such as astronomy, condensed matter physics, and particle physics. Again, these are <i>tenured</i> academic positions.

I guess that I'm trying to say your chances for doing research are good so long as you fight the good fight, but you shouldn't expect to become a professor with the same certainty.

P.S. As for your questions about where you should work after University:

I know that in my country, research on the level of serious scientific papers is not truly done until the graduate level, after the traditional undergraduate degree. Usually any true researcher in these fields will complete a PhD and then continue research as a post-doctoral scholar wherever there is funding to be had. Places you might work would be at large research Universities, National Labs like Los Alamos, or sometimes private companies where the research is profit oriented rather than purely scientific.

As for the "chances" you have of becoming an Astrophysicist, that's something that can only be evaluated by your grades, your drive, and peer review of your work at the higher levels (:
 
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  • #3
joyfulcynic said:
Hello >Astro's<,

I'm from the U.S. and in my country, while it will definitely be possible for you (given that you are able to deal the academic rigor required of those in these fields) to eventually work as a post-doc researcher, if you want to become a tenured professor in any of these fields the road is very hard, narrow, and long.

I recently spoke with Dr. Manoj Kaplinghat who is a cosmologist at my University, and he estimated that there were about 10 openings annually in academic faculty positions of his specific field in the U.S. per year. That's in a country of 310 million people, with the largest and best-funded research universities in the world. He further speculated that there were approximately 50 openings annually in fields related to his, such as astronomy, condensed matter physics, and particle physics. Again, these are <i>tenured</i> academic positions.


I guess that I'm trying to say your chances for doing research are good so long as you fight the good fight, but you shouldn't expect to become a professor with the same certainty.

P.S. As for your questions about where you should work after University:

I know that in my country, research on the level of serious scientific papers is not truly done until the graduate level, after the traditional undergraduate degree. Usually any true researcher in these fields will complete a PhD and then continue research as a post-doctoral scholar wherever there is funding to be had. Places you might work would be at large research Universities, National Labs like Los Alamos, or sometimes private companies where the research is profit oriented rather than purely scientific.

As for the "chances" you have of becoming an Astrophysicist, that's something that can only be evaluated by your grades, your drive, and peer review of your work at the higher levels (:

Thank you so much il have that in focus
 
  • #4
Be wary of advice from a self-proclaimed cynic! Though to be fair, a joyful one :smile:. But all joking aside, joyfulcynic made some good points. Though as I understand it, the large majority of researchers out there are not tenured (have a full professorship), as tenureship is becoming ever rarer. Most are research professors or associate professors...pretty much the same job but less job security.

Your chances of doing some kind of research in astronomy/astrophysics is much better than 50 in 310 million, and are of course largely up to you. You'll have to bust your butt and be at the top of your game to have a decent shot. Keep in mind that astrophysics has much more competition that other areas of physics because (a), it's sexier, everyone wants to do it, and (b) it's not a field that generates money for industry like solid state physics, for example, so funding is harder to come by.

If you do obtain a Ph.D. in astrophysics, you may not end up with the research position you always wanted, but you'll definitely be able to get a well paying job doing something. And you'll have a deep understanding of what you are most fascinated by. What is that worth to you?

Edit: You should do some searching in the https://www.physicsforums.com/forumdisplay.php?f=193" of this forum. There are lots of threads about astrophysics careers with lots of good advice.
 
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  • #5
Astro's said:
Hello everyone right now I am studying in Middle school and next year I am going to Highschool...

My advice, from someone who once - many years ago - was thinking similar thoughts, is not to worry about what you're going to be when you grow up right now. You have lots and lots of time to sort it out, and your plans will change over that time, so there's really no need to worry about where you might work after you finish a Ph.D. program in a particular field in 15 years or so. If you like physics and math and think you'd like to go to college, then take those classes and enjoy them and learn.

I myself have always, well since I was 8 or so at least, been interested in astronomy and astrophysics, and I still was in high-school, so I wanted to go into astrophysics. I changed my mind in college and went with straight physics, thinking I was going to find an interesting job right out of college. Nope, so I went to graduate school, and almost went into an astrophysics program but decided to go into applied physics and wound up specializing in x-ray diagnosis of plasmas. I'm still interested in astronomy and astrophysics as a very knowledgeable amateur, but no one pays me to think about that stuff. Life has lots of turns ahead, no matter where in life you are.
 
  • #6
Does anyone know the salary for astrophysicists?
 
  • #7
Said Harbieh said:
Does anyone know the salary for astrophysicists?

Varies, here in U.K the basic salary starts from 26-25k for a year. I presume you can make more if you make terrific progress and as a result of which gain experience.

OP I personally believe that although it's good to have an ambition, (aspirations who lacks it anyway ? ) but to also have a back up plan. Since you're only in middle school , for now try to grasp basic understanding of simple algebra , read science journals ( don't just isolate yourself to a sub-branch of physics. Science is beauty, physics is the pinnacle).
 
  • #8
Thanks Iby, I'm in australia, and yes 'middle' or High school as we call it in australia, I'm a year 10 doing phys,chem and bio.

But i panicked when i found out the max salary for astrophysicists is 150K WITH a Ph.D.

I've wanted to do it since i was 5, my father bought me a science book and i was taken away lol..
 
  • #9
Said Harbieh said:
But i panicked when i found out the max salary for astrophysicists is 150K WITH a Ph.D.
I'm going to be blunt, so bear with me.

Panicked? It's time for a reality check. And perhaps a check on your greed as well.

The latter issue first. There's nothing wrong per se with being greedy. Our modern world full of conveniences like the computer on which I'm typing this post depends on people who wanted to get rich. However, very, very few who do get rich do so by being an academician.

If you want to get rich you need to make that your one and only goal. You need to be prepared to work 80 to 120 (or more!) hours per week and you need to pretty much forego doing intellectually challenging work. Even those who take the route of a high-tech startup often end up turning the intellectually challenging work over to others. You need to focus on one thing, which is growing and leading the business. Taking time out to do the intellectually challenging work yourself is a big mistake. If your path to wealth is a high tech startup, you will need to keep tabs on that work, but it is someone else who is having all the fun.As for the reality check, come on! You have false expectations regarding what people typically make, even of what an exceptional person typically makes. Panicking at a measly salary of $150K? That's close to the top 1% in salaries in Australia. (1.5%, to be precise, as of 2006-2007). Even $100K puts you in the top 5%. The median salary in Australia is a lot less than that.

You also have false expectations about academia. It is not the place to get fantastically rich. It is a place to have a very comfortable salary, a very comfortable job (not even close to 80+ hour weeks), and very interesting work. It is by all accounts a fairly cushy job.

One final note: Because it is a cushy job, the competition is a bit fierce. Academia churns out a lot more astrophysicists than are needed in academia. Academia churns out a whole lot more PhDs in general than are needed in academia. Some PhDs (e.g., those in most branches of engineering), find it fairly easy to find a job in their field outside of academia. Others don't. It's a bit tough to find a job outside of academia if your PhD is in the classics (Greek and Latin) or English literature. And astrophysics. Keep that in mind when it comes to planning your future.
 
  • #10
D H said:
However, very, very few who do get rich do so by being an academician.

Although it happens from time to time... I know of a Nobel winner whose salary is $500K (professor salaries for public universities are public records). On the other hand, the football coach at the same school makes $1M.

If you want to get rich you need to make that your one and only goal.

Disagree. To live a balanced life, you have to balance several competing goals. Also, I don't think that the ideal of the "starving academic" is going to do you any good. Personally I've found that *thinking* has been very useful in making money. If you think you can understand the big bang, you can apply the same skills to figure out the world economy and your role in it.

Taking time out to do the intellectually challenging work yourself is a big mistake. If your path to wealth is a high tech startup, you will need to keep tabs on that work, but it is someone else who is having all the fun.

There are lots of different types of intellectual challenges. I've found that the people that tend to make the most money and power in a business are the people that are good at convincing people to give them money and power. Personally, I find that part of business interesting, but I also find the geeky math bits interesting, and trying to get everything in balance is why I find things in general interesting.

As for the reality check, come on! You have false expectations regarding what people typically make, even of what an exceptional person typically makes. Panicking at a measly salary of $150K? That's close to the top 1% in salaries in Australia. (1.5%, to be precise, as of 2006-2007). Even $100K puts you in the top 5%. The median salary in Australia is a lot less than that.

$150K/year is also starting salary for a first year Ph.D. quant on Wall Street.

You also have false expectations about academia. It is not the place to get fantastically rich. It is a place to have a very comfortable salary, a very comfortable job (not even close to 80+ hour weeks), and very interesting work. It is by all accounts a fairly cushy job.

Once you get tenure yes. It can be hell to be junior faculty.

Others don't. It's a bit tough to find a job outside of academia if your PhD is in the classics (Greek and Latin) or English literature. And astrophysics. Keep that in mind when it comes to planning your future.

This is incorrect. It's not particularly difficult for a theoretical astrophysicist to find a job in industry. You just have to look at the right industries.
 
  • #11
Thanks guys, really reinforced my willingness to become a astrophysicist. In new south wales i need 75 percent on my HSC (higher school certificate) to do science in university and 80 to do it in Sydney University (i really want to go there, it's amazing, edwardian architecture for one of the buildings makes it look like something from harry potter *i hate that movie*)
 
  • #12
I'm an astrophysicist. Most of my friends and I who went into academia (postdocs, professorships) are making 40k - 60k a year. We'll be lucky to reach 80k mid-career at the schools we work at (some public, some private). I only know a couple of astrophysicists making 150k a year, and one of them has a Nobel Prize - and they all have to earn that money through grants, it's not a salary. 150k a year as a scientist in academia is a very unreasonable expectation.
 
  • #13
I'm an astrophysicist. Most of my friends and I who went into academia (postdocs, professorships) are making 40k - 60k a year.

And since the majority of astrophysics careers end at the postdoc level, the median astrophysicist probably makes something like 35-40k for his/her entire (short) career. Science isn't something you get into if you want money or a career. Its something you do for a short time out of love/naivety before being forced to move on by the realities of life.
 
  • #14
ParticleGrl said:
Science isn't something you get into if you want money or a career. Its something you do for a short time out of love/naivety before being forced to move on by the realities of life.

This is not true for science as a whole. There are other fields of science outside physics and astrophysics
 
  • #15
ParticleGrl said:
Science isn't something you get into if you want money or a career. Its something you do for a short time out of love/naivety before being forced to move on by the realities of life.

Disagree with this statement. As far as getting money, science isn't that much worse than anything else, and depending on how you play your cards, it could be better.

As far as being realistic. One reason that I ended up working at a high paying job is so that I can put money in the bank, so that at some point in my life, I'll retire and then spend the rest of my life doing computational astrophysics until they bury me.

One other reality is that you may be screwed whatever you do, so you might as well do something that you like since you are doomed either way. I can imagine a scenario in which Italy and Spain blow up in the next six months, the world economy gets wrecked, and next year, I'll be selling apples in between organizing protests.

One thing that astrophysics has given me is a little arrogance, which can come in useful. After all, if I can figure out flux limited diffusion of neutrinos, then figuring out the job market and how the pieces of the world economy work, shouldn't be beyond my capacity.

Also I've found that "thinking big thoughts" and "asking big questions" turns out to be useful. You do what you are told for X years with the promise that there is a reward at the end (and it doesn't matter if the reward is a pot of gold or a tenured faculty position). It's not there, so at that point your skills at figuring out the big bang should come in handy to figure out what happens next.
 
  • #16
twofish-quant said:
Also, I don't think that the ideal of the "starving academic" is going to do you any good.
Starving academic? Please. $90K - $150K is not starving. Far, far from it. There's nothing wrong with being in only the top 5% or so of all wage earners.
 
  • #17
D H said:
<snip>
You also have false expectations about academia. It is not the place to get fantastically rich. It is a place to have a very comfortable salary, a very comfortable job (not even close to 80+ hour weeks), and very interesting work. It is by all accounts a fairly cushy job.
<snip>

I have to jump in here, because other than the first two sentences, this is basically false- at least, that I have a 'cushy' job. I work hard, get thoroughly frustrated like at any other job I've had, and can't imagine doing anything else.

Increasingly, academia is requiring tenure-track (and tenured) researchers to pay for their own research- I mean pay for their *time*- the term is 'salary recovery'. The days of someone sitting at their desk/blackboard/computer and doing nothing but thinking have been over for decades.

My salary is public information, and is less than what I earned working in industry. Even so, I agree it's higher than the (US) national average. So what? Shouldn't there be an incentive to spend their productive years becoming an expert in something?
 
  • #18
Andy Resnick said:
My salary is public information, and is less than what I earned working in industry. Even so, I agree it's higher than the (US) national average. So what? Shouldn't there be an incentive to spend their productive years becoming an expert in something?
So it is. Your job title is qualified with the derogatory "assistant". You also appear to work at one of the second tier schools in your area's higher education system; even the chair of your department doesn't make all that much. The physics department in the top tier school in the same system has several professors (even some associates) who make over 100K. Quite a few make over 150K, and a handful make more than 200K. And that doesn't count consultancies.

The academic world is a bit upside down compared to industry. Fresh outs who go to industry are not expected to wrangle new work. That's something the older guys do. We older guys have to create work that pays our own salary many times over. Fresh outs who take the academic route are very much expected to wrangle new work. How well one does that is the key to getting rid of that derogatory "assistant" qualifier. Get rid of that qualifier and the job is cushy, particularly compared to a comparably aged/educated/compensated person in industry. The work load in industry increases rather dramatically over time.
 
  • #19
D H said:
Starving academic? Please. $90K - $150K is not starving. Far, far from it. There's nothing wrong with being in only the top 5% or so of all wage earners.

I was thinking more about the attitude than the money. The idea that science should be this pure intellectual quest and thinking about how you are going to support yourself and your family is somehow a bad thing. We'd be a lot better if people thought of science less as a calling and at least saw it as a job.

If you get a professorship then the salaries are decent. The problem is that you are not likely to get the job, and you are likely to make $40K as a post-doc and $20K as a graduate student. The other problem which people don't like to talk about is that in order to allow professors to have $90K-$150K positions, you need a huge stream of graduate students and post-docs making a lot less. Some of this is unavoidable economic reality, but I'd prefer if people face up to the situation, and acknowledge that there are elements of a Ponzi scheme going on here.
 
  • #20
D H said:
So it is. Your job title is qualified with the derogatory "assistant". You also appear to work at one of the second tier schools in your area's higher education system; even the chair of your department doesn't make all that much. The physics department in the top tier school in the same system has several professors (even some associates) who make over 100K. Quite a few make over 150K, and a handful make more than 200K. And that doesn't count consultancies.

The academic world is a bit upside down compared to industry. Fresh outs who go to industry are not expected to wrangle new work. That's something the older guys do. We older guys have to create work that pays our own salary many times over. Fresh outs who take the academic route are very much expected to wrangle new work. How well one does that is the key to getting rid of that derogatory "assistant" qualifier. Get rid of that qualifier and the job is cushy, particularly compared to a comparably aged/educated/compensated person in industry. The work load in industry increases rather dramatically over time.
First, I don't see what is so derogatory about "Assistant".
As for the wrangling of new work, you may have to do that even in industry if you happen to be in sales, i.e. if your job description calls for it. As I understand it, the reason for the existence of academic positions is the creation of knowledge so it is not strange at all that you would be expected to wrangle new work. That's what you got hired for
 
  • #21
Andy Resnick said:
Increasingly, academia is requiring tenure-track (and tenured) researchers to pay for their own research- I mean pay for their *time*- the term is 'salary recovery'.

Yup and it's worse for non-tenured junior faculty. Something that's really scary is to see how much of people's time involves either asking for or keeping track of money. Once I figured out how important money that got me interested in the question of "so what is money, anyway?" which got me where I am.

The days of someone sitting at their desk/blackboard/computer and doing nothing but thinking have been over for decades.

Which is something that really bothers me. I was raised in the world of Star Trek and the space program, and the idea was that by now we would have gotten to Jupiter and robots would be doing all of the grunt work. Hasn't turned out that way. But what really bothers me is that we are moving *away* from the Star Trek utopia. You'd think that with all of the science and technology of the past five decades, it would be *easier* to live the life of the mind and let robots be the servants.

But we are moving away from that. I'm not sure why, but it has something to do with that money thing.

I suppose one problem is that I come of age with the fall of the Soviet Union at which point we assumed that we were headed straight for the promised land. Something that people need to remember is that before 2008, the last recession in the United States was in 1991, so we assumed that we had this economics things all figured out. Well, we didn't.
 
  • #22
One other thing that I find that people entering the field really don't think much about is how is this all going to end. What I find interesting is that people figure that by age 35, they get to the pot of gold, and then they coast for the rest of their life. I've found that this is not a good way of thinking about it.

In the end, we all are going to die, so the end is death. The question then becomes what path one takes between being alive (now) and being dead. I'm more or less half way between birth and death, and it's interesting what the world looks like from this vantage point.

Something that happens is that science and astrophysics is really addictive. I went through the standard young person science path. Science fairs, Westinghouse, science camp, and all of the other things. Good SAT scores, good undergraduate school, got my Ph.D. Now you put your entire life around science, you put your entire life around academics. Then one day someone tells you that you've hit the ceiling. You've gone this far, but you aren't going to go any further.

People react in different ways, but for me there is so much psychological pressure and emotion around competing that I'm not going to go quietly in the night. Now the good news is that after a few years, I've managed to find somewhere and something that I can put all of that competitive energy into something that is probably socially useful and not self-destructive.

But the point that I'm making is that you shouldn't see life just as a means to a goal. If you get on the science treadmill, you may find yourself competing and fighting for the rest of your life, which is fine for me. One other thing that I've learned that's funny is that a lot of the social issues you see in high school are things that just continue on and on. In high school, I saw a lot of social cliques, and you had the "cool and popular kids" and then people that just weren't. I hated this, and I couldn't wait to get myself out of high school into college where I wouldn't have to worry about "cliques" and "social ladders". Guess what. It's not just high school. Life is like that...
 
  • #23
D H said:
Your job title is qualified with the derogatory "assistant".

Why is that derogatory?
 
  • #24
Andy Resnick said:
Why is that derogatory?
The academic community treats it as such. Walk the halls in a college and look at the nameplates. Full professors don't have "Full" in front of their name. They are just "Professor Josiah S. Carberry." It is the lowly assistant and associate professors who have those qualifiers placed in front of "professor." Everyone who is in the know knows the professorial pecking order, and the nameplates announce exactly where everyone stands in that pecking order.

Assistant professors are poorly paid, work slavish hours, and are dismissed at the drop of a hat if they don't publish massive quantities of papers and garner research grants that pay their own way plus the way of the post-docs and grad students who will work with the assistant professor. Plus the way of the full professors who managed to get their names on the grant proposal while barely doing a lick of work.
 
  • #25
I'm an assistant professor, and my nameplate says Professor. No qualifiers. No one addresses me as 'assistant professor'. It's a rank, not a job description. Heck, even the adjuncts at my college have nameplates that say 'professor'. I'm making more than I did as a postdoc, and far more than I did as a grad student. It's still not a lot of money, but after living on less than 20k for 6 years, I can very comfortably live on three times that. Sure, I work very long hours. Sure, I don't get overtime. But I like my job, and a lot more than I liked working for the government. Almost all the full professors I know work just as much as I do.
 
  • #26
So far I am finding the content(argument) of this thread very informative and useful. It's always good to know/ be aware of what you may experience in the years to come by from fellow veterans.Gives you an edge or maybe some time to make the right decision.
 
  • #27
D H said:
The academic community treats it as such. Walk the halls in a college and look at the nameplates. Full professors don't have "Full" in front of their name. They are just "Professor Josiah S. Carberry." It is the lowly assistant and associate professors who have those qualifiers placed in front of "professor." Everyone who is in the know knows the professorial pecking order, and the nameplates announce exactly where everyone stands in that pecking order.

Assistant professors are poorly paid, work slavish hours, and are dismissed at the drop of a hat if they don't publish massive quantities of papers and garner research grants that pay their own way plus the way of the post-docs and grad students who will work with the assistant professor. Plus the way of the full professors who managed to get their names on the grant proposal while barely doing a lick of work.

This is a ridiculous rant of a post.

I've had at least 6 different job titles since grad school: Research Scientist, Senior Scientist, Engineer II, Instructor... something I have learned is that in terms of a career, any particular job title is meaningless. Any time I started a new job I first had to prove myself to the more senior people- academia and industry are alike in that regard as well.

In my experience, people that are concerned about what specific job title they have are less concerned about the quality of the work they do.

Also like industry, as one is promoted in academia, one's responsibilities and expectations increase: while promotion from assistant to associate generally requires that one stand above others at a national level of competition, promotion to full professor generally requires standing above others at an *international* level of competition. The full professors I know work harder, smarter, and better under more fractured conditions than I do.
 
  • #28
People have different experiences, since different universities, companies, fields, and groups between companies have wildly different social structures. Mine are closer to "D H"'s than there are to yours or eri's.

There's also a Bayesian selection effect. People that have better experiences in academia tend to end up in academia. People that have better experiences in industry, tend to end up in industry.

Andy Resnick said:
I've had at least 6 different job titles since grad school: Research Scientist, Senior Scientist, Engineer II, Instructor... something I have learned is that in terms of a career, any particular job title is meaningless.

That's not been my experience. Some titles are meaningless. Some are vital. In the military, it makes a big, big difference whether you are a corporal or a colonel. Some companies (i.e. investment banks) have military style ranks where you can't even attend a meeting if you don't have a given rank. Other companies go out of their way to avoid ranks (i.e. Bloomberg) does that.

In one situation, when the company offered me a package, I was able to negotiate a rank of Software Developer IV rather than Software Developer III. The reason that was important was that I knew how the HR system worked, and that if I was a low-paid Software Developer IV rather than a highly-paid Software Developer III then what would happen was that I'd get a huge raise in a year when everyone forgot about the negotiations. If I had tried to negotiate a higher salary then, I would have gotten resistance because the manager would have had to cover the salary from his budget, but the SDIV rank was "free" since it didn't come with any immediate salary increase.

Ranks turn out to be important in bureaucratic, hierarchical organizations. One thing that happens is that if you abolish formal ranks, then they come into being anyway.

Any time I started a new job I first had to prove myself to the more senior people- academia and industry are alike in that regard as well.

I've found things to be different in some critical ways...

1) The relationship is much more two-sided in the places I've worked. I have to prove myself to senior people, but they also have to prove themselves to me. When times are good (i.e. the dot-com boom), senior people will bend themselves backward to get skilled talent. When times are bad (i.e. now), the senior people have more power, but I've never seen the relationship as one sided as in academia.

This matters a lot. If you think that the senior managers are running your company into the ground, there isn't much you can do to change their behavior, so you can exercise the one real power you have and vote with your feet. So in the companies that I've worked for, it's more of a dialogue than in academia.

2) You have a middle layer of people in industry. The really senior people are off in the stratosphere somewhere, and you never see the CEO except in a ceremonial situation, and you never interact with them in any meaningful way. This means that you have a layer of middle managers, and you often have tension (and sometimes outright wars) between the people at the bottom and the senior management (see any Dilbert cartoon).

Also like industry, as one is promoted in academia, one's responsibilities and expectations increase: while promotion from assistant to associate generally requires that one stand above others at a national level of competition, promotion to full professor generally requires standing above others at an *international* level of competition. The full professors I know work harder, smarter, and better under more fractured conditions than I do.

It's very different in academia and industry. First of all, industry is usually not "up or out". In academia, you *must* be promoted or else you will be asked to leave. In industry, I've known people that have worked in the trenches for decades, and they don't *want* a promotion.

Part of it is it is often *not* the general situation in industry that the people at senior levels are smarter, more experienced, or more capable than the junior people. People at the lower levels tend to be more concerned with technical issues. People at the higher levels tend to be concerned more with personnel, strategy, and financial issues. One way of thinking about it is that the senior management team in a company are like orchestra conductors or movie producers. They have a particular skill, but you could be incompetent at playing a particular instrument.

At one company, I started with 100% technical. I got promoted so my work became 60% technical and 40% managerial, which was where I wanted to be. My boss was 25% technical, and her boss was 0% technical. At that point, I didn't *want* to get promoted.

Also in some high tech companies, the programmers make more money, have more status, and often have more real power than the managers. I've never seen a situation in which this has happened at the department level in academia.

One reason I wanted to get out of academia was that I loved being a graduate student, and I wanted to be one for the rest of my life (with some more money). In academia, you *can't* be a graduate student for the rest of your life, but in industry you can.
 

1. What qualifications do I need to become an Astrophysicist?

To become an Astrophysicist, you will typically need to have a bachelor's degree in physics, astronomy, or a related field. Many positions may also require a graduate degree (master's or PhD) in astrophysics or a specific subfield.

2. What skills are important for an Astrophysicist?

Strong mathematical and analytical skills are crucial for an Astrophysicist, as well as the ability to think critically and creatively. Excellent communication skills and the ability to work well in a team are also important in this field.

3. What kind of job opportunities are available for Astrophysicists?

Astrophysicists can find job opportunities in various industries, including academia, government agencies, research institutions, and private companies. Some common job titles in this field include research scientist, data analyst, and professor.

4. Is there a high demand for Astrophysicists?

There is a growing demand for skilled Astrophysicists, especially in fields like space exploration and satellite technology. However, competition for positions can be high, so it is important to have a strong education and skill set.

5. What can I expect for salary and job outlook as an Astrophysicist?

The salary and job outlook for Astrophysicists can vary depending on factors such as education, experience, and location. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median annual wage for physicists and astronomers was $122,220 in May 2020. The job outlook for this field is expected to grow at a rate of 7% from 2019 to 2029, which is faster than the average for all occupations.

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