Nienstien said:
I know i want to work a job in sciences and my family wants me to work as a doctor. I think being an MD is a pretty good idea except for the fact that I would be far too stressed around the death and injury. I am more interested in physics,
This happens to many high school students, I myself was there too. You need to take a proper look at what career options involve, and what subjects you truly enjoy doing. Be careful not to just avoid things your family suggest, because they're suggesting it - it's an unconscious thing that people of high school age often do!
Sit down with a careers book and have a look at different jobs, you don't need to choose one specifically, but it helps to get a general idea of some region that you could see yourself working in.
http://prospects.ac.uk/
Is a UK resource, but has plenty of valid information that pertains to subjects rather than locations.
Nienstien said:
however, I don't see many career options in the field.
Then you simply aren't looking. A physics degree gives one a great skillset, and as such thousands of different job types are possible. I studied physics and I've worked on biomedical engineering projects, mathematics projects and physics projects. A lot of skills between these areas (that is, engineering, maths and physics) are interchangeable. This means that should it come to it, as a physicist you can easily transfer to an engineering position.
There are also lots of industry jobs for physicists. From things like working for computer hardware companies doing crystal modelling for monitor screens to designing ultrasound machines.
Nienstien said:
If I were to take a career in physics i would like to do research and maybe teaching but I would also like some time for recreation.
Me too, me too.
Nienstien said:
A lot of jobs in physics seem to give much lower salaries than other PhD jobs.
Do they? And what jobs are you comparing?
Nienstien said:
I have considered engineering but I wouldn't know which to go into. I have also considered being a professor, but that also takes a lot of work and you don't get all that much pay.
You mean a researching academic? Those jobs are extremely hard to get as it is, and I would say that they actually pay quite well. Not as well as we would like, but certainly well enough to live on. It depends what your priorities are.
On the point about considering engineering but 'not knowing which to go into' you should consider the fact that physics is essentially a general knowledge in the physical sciences degree. You learn a little bit about a lot of things. You'll do mechanics, electronics, deal with forces, understand material properties among other things. This means as a physics graduate you're in a place to go into positions in really any engineering discipline. Things will be more difficult for you than pure-graduates when you start a job, but it'll just be a case of learning the language, so to speak.