What Are the Work Hours and Lifestyle for Aspiring Physicists?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the work hours and lifestyle of aspiring physicists, particularly focusing on the balance between academic commitments and personal life. Participants share their experiences and expectations regarding time spent studying, working, and engaging in leisure activities, with an emphasis on different fields within physics such as astrophysics and theoretical physics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses concern about the potential workload of a physicist, referencing a claim that astrophysicists may work around 60 hours a week, and questions whether this allows for a balanced lifestyle.
  • A graduate student in astrophysics shares their experience of working about 40 hours a week on research, plus an additional 10 to 15 hours studying, noting that leisure time is more available during the summer.
  • Another participant mentions that lab members typically work 40-50 hours a week, but this can drop to around 20 hours during periods when experiments are on hold.
  • One participant emphasizes the personal sacrifices made for physics, stating that their social life takes a back seat to their studies and research commitments.
  • A participant expresses optimism about having free time and the ability to engage in personal projects like telescope work when not busy with studies.
  • Several participants discuss their plans for university, including choices of programs and concerns about workload, indicating uncertainty about their future paths in physics.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants present a range of experiences and expectations regarding work hours and lifestyle, with no clear consensus on the typical workload or lifestyle balance for physicists. Some express optimism about finding time for leisure, while others highlight the demanding nature of the field.

Contextual Notes

Participants' claims about work hours and lifestyle are based on personal experiences and may vary significantly depending on specific fields within physics, individual circumstances, and institutional expectations.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals considering a career in physics, current physics students, and those interested in the lifestyle and work-life balance of physicists may find this discussion relevant.

Unicyclist
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I want to become a physicist and should go to university to start my BSc soon. But what about the hours? How much time will I spend studying? When I graduate, how much time will I spend working? In that two year old astrophysics with politics thread I read that an astrophysicist works around 60 hours a week. That's a lot! I don't mind working, but I want to do other things as well, like sports, going out and travelling. Will my job allow for it? Both financially and in terms of time?

I'm not sure what kind of physicist I want to be yet, but I'll probably do research(or be a theorist). This is probably very general, so could you please give me some cases for different physicists, just to see what's it like for different people.

Any information is appreciated, thank you.
 
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I'm a first year graduate student in astrophysics. I spend about 40 hours a week working on research, and an additional 10 to 15 a week studying for my qualifier. When the school year starts, I'll be swamped with classes and TA duties, but during the summer I've had plenty of time for leisure activity. My professors also seem to have a good deal of time off. One of them, for example, recently took about a month off, and before that he was coming in for half days. So yes, you'd have a good deal of time for recreation as a physicist, though you'd probably have to wait until you were out of grad school.

Also keep one thing in mind with the 60 hours figure. Academics tend to like what they do. An astrophysicist who works 60 hours a week probably puts in the 40 hours required of him, and then another 20 hours just because he feels like it. For example, I just got back from a trip to a gamma ray telescope with my professor (we were doing maintenance and testing of the components). We put in about 8 hours a day. But one night, we just randomly decided to go to the observatory and turn everything on to see if it worked. I'm sure that stuff like that gets absorbed into the 60 hours figure.
 
I'm not a graduate student, but I have asked this same question of those in the lab here with me. It seems that with classes, research and studying they put in about 40-50 hours a week. However, there are also long stretches of time where the experiment is on hold, waiting on another school or a piece of hardware, where they might only spend 20 hours a week on physics related stuff.

This is in a particle astrophysics lab.
 
Like any profession, you get out what you put in.

I asked my wife not to come with me to graduate school, because all she would do is stare at me while I study or do research. I don't have the luxury or the inclination to have a social life. Everything takes a back seat to physics.
 
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Hmm, sounds good so far.

I can have free time when I want it or I can always go and fiddle with some telescope if I haven't got much on... Sweet.

Now to go to university and get that master's...
 
Which uni are you off to Unicyclist?

Are you doing the 4 year undergrad Master's?
 
I want to go to Edinburgh University to do a 5 year Master's.

Haven't chosen any specific field yet, just physics...
 
I'm starting at the Uni of Leeds doing the 4yr MPhys in straight physics. I'm sort of interested in theoretical too, but that is a different program from day one. Maths at a higher level, and you miss one of the labs. I do feel a bit torn between straight physics and theoretical, and it's awkward having to decide between the two when I haven't even got to the uni yet, and am uncertain of what the workload will actually be like.
 

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