What specific field of physics to study

AI Thread Summary
Determining a specific field of study within physics can be challenging for new students, especially when interests span multiple areas such as electrical physics, astronomy, and particle physics. It's emphasized that undergraduate studies in physics are generally broad and not specialized, allowing students to explore various topics before making a decision. Students are encouraged to focus on foundational learning and take advantage of elective courses and research opportunities to gain exposure to different fields. Specialization typically occurs later, often not until junior year or even during graduate studies, as students refine their interests through diverse experiences in both experimental and theoretical physics.
leftyguitarjo
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Hello. I am a high school senior, and I have already enrolled in college to study physics.

But I have an important question: How does one determine what localized field of physics to study?

I do a lot of electrical work, and would love to dive into the forces that push that current through the wire. But, astronomy intrigues the heck out of me, as do the workings of elementary particles. I also read up a lot on the fascinating thins that happen at the speed of light, and would love to be a part of that study.
 
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This is what your undergrad study in physics is supposed to help you do. You still have lot's of time before you have to pick a specialty, so don't fret too much about it! Enjoy your undergrad study in physics, and focus on learning physics and how to do it. Specializing will come later. By then you'll have a better idea, since you'll have had a little taste of things from many fields, experimental and theoretical.
 
I wouldn't worry about it yet. Most undergraduate physics degrees are "general", not "specialized." You probably won't have a significant choice in specialized or elective courses until your junior year. Explore as many different fields as you can, via elective courses and research experience.

I didn't decide on my Ph.D. field until my second year in graduate school.
 
*cough particle cough*
 
I worked in three areas before finally settling on a dissertation topic, experimental optics, crystal growth then finally optical and electronic properties of anisotropic semiconductors. Really it was my 3rd year before I decided.
 
I graduated with a BSc in Physics in 2020. Since there were limited opportunities in my country (mostly teaching), I decided to improve my programming skills and began working in IT, first as a software engineer and later as a quality assurance engineer, where I’ve now spent about 3 years. While this career path has provided financial stability, I’ve realized that my excitement and passion aren’t really there, unlike what I felt when studying or doing research in physics. Working in IT...
Hi everyone! I'm a senior majoring in physics, math, and music, and I'm currently in the process applying for theoretical and computational biophysics (primarily thru physics departments) Ph.D. programs. I have a 4.0 from a basically unknown school in the American South, two REUs (T50 and T25) in computational biophysics and two semesters of research in optics (one purely experimental, one comp/exp) at my home institution (since there aren't any biophysics profs at my school), but no...

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