- #1
Phys12
- 351
- 42
Hello everyone!
I'm an international student applying for Ph.D programs for fall 2020 (mostly Astronomy, specifically Cosmology; but some are in Neutrino Physics).
My qualifications:
Undergrad institution: US univ ranked 100+ by US News with very good neutrino Physics program
Cumulative GPA (Physics and Math major): 4.0
PGRE: 800/990 (close to 70 percentile)
General GRE (Will take soon)
Publications: 1, with about 5 on the way (I'll serve as the first/corresponding author on 3 of them)
Recommendation Letters: one very strong (one of the best, if not, the best letter the professor has ever written), another very strong because the professor knows about my work but I have barely worked for him for 3 months, and third letter would be "pretty strong" as said by the professor (:D)
Research: 2.5 years neutrino Physics (both hardware and software, with one summer project with a professor at Harvard and a scientist at PNNL), about a year in Astronomy (this is the first author paper for which I automated a process)
All my advisors recommended I apply to top schools, however, I'm very worried about my prospects of getting into a graduate school and want to make sure I have backups. I wanted to know if my list of graduate schools sounds reasonable enough (in a sense that you think, from your years of experience of seeing different applicants be admitted to different schools, I have a decent chance of getting into *any* of them and whether or not I have a chance of getting into my reach schools). Are there any schools with a good Cosmology department that you'd recommend I add to my list? Thank you so much for your time and feedback!
Harvard University (Neutrino Physics, Physicis Ph.D)
Stanford University (Cosmology/Neutrino Physics, Physics Ph.D)
UC Berkley (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
The University of Chicago (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Cornell University (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
UCLA (Neutrino Physics, one professor in specific uses Cosmology tools to study neutrinos; will mention wanting to work with him in SoP, Physics Ph.D)
CMU (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Univ of Michigan, Ann Arbor (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Univ of Hawaii (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Ohio State University (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
UC, Irvine (Cosmology, Physics Ph.D)
UCSD (Cosmology, Physics Ph.D)
UCSC (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Rice Univ (Cosmology/Neutrino Physics, Physics Ph.D)
P.S. I know the qualifications I mentioned is in contrast to the one given in my last post (with the change being that I've added a couple more publications and another paper with my as a corresponding author). This is because I only found out recently that the work I did over the summer is actually being turned into a paper and that my Astronomy group decided to split the work into two papers
I'm an international student applying for Ph.D programs for fall 2020 (mostly Astronomy, specifically Cosmology; but some are in Neutrino Physics).
My qualifications:
Undergrad institution: US univ ranked 100+ by US News with very good neutrino Physics program
Cumulative GPA (Physics and Math major): 4.0
PGRE: 800/990 (close to 70 percentile)
General GRE (Will take soon)
Publications: 1, with about 5 on the way (I'll serve as the first/corresponding author on 3 of them)
Recommendation Letters: one very strong (one of the best, if not, the best letter the professor has ever written), another very strong because the professor knows about my work but I have barely worked for him for 3 months, and third letter would be "pretty strong" as said by the professor (:D)
Research: 2.5 years neutrino Physics (both hardware and software, with one summer project with a professor at Harvard and a scientist at PNNL), about a year in Astronomy (this is the first author paper for which I automated a process)
All my advisors recommended I apply to top schools, however, I'm very worried about my prospects of getting into a graduate school and want to make sure I have backups. I wanted to know if my list of graduate schools sounds reasonable enough (in a sense that you think, from your years of experience of seeing different applicants be admitted to different schools, I have a decent chance of getting into *any* of them and whether or not I have a chance of getting into my reach schools). Are there any schools with a good Cosmology department that you'd recommend I add to my list? Thank you so much for your time and feedback!
Harvard University (Neutrino Physics, Physicis Ph.D)
Stanford University (Cosmology/Neutrino Physics, Physics Ph.D)
UC Berkley (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
The University of Chicago (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Cornell University (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
UCLA (Neutrino Physics, one professor in specific uses Cosmology tools to study neutrinos; will mention wanting to work with him in SoP, Physics Ph.D)
CMU (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Univ of Michigan, Ann Arbor (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Univ of Hawaii (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Ohio State University (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
UC, Irvine (Cosmology, Physics Ph.D)
UCSD (Cosmology, Physics Ph.D)
UCSC (Cosmology, Astronomy Ph.D)
Rice Univ (Cosmology/Neutrino Physics, Physics Ph.D)
P.S. I know the qualifications I mentioned is in contrast to the one given in my last post (with the change being that I've added a couple more publications and another paper with my as a corresponding author). This is because I only found out recently that the work I did over the summer is actually being turned into a paper and that my Astronomy group decided to split the work into two papers
Last edited: