When Do You Earn the Title of Cosmologist?

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The discussion centers on the criteria for earning the title of cosmologist, exploring whether it is self-appointed or requires formal achievements in the field. It highlights that the title often relates to academic qualifications, such as a PhD in Physics, with cosmology being a specialization rather than a standalone degree. Recognition as a cosmologist typically comes from publishing influential research and being invited to speak at conferences. The conversation also notes that cosmology can be housed within various academic departments, including Physics, Astronomy, or even Mathematics, depending on the institution. There is no official certification for cosmologists; rather, the title is informally attributed to those who contribute significantly to the field through their work and citations.
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when do a person earn that title?

is it self-appointed or does the person has to have done something in that field? and what is considered the field of cosmology as it is a bit from relativity to quantum mechanics?
 
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Google would be a good start... :rolleyes:
 
A cosmologist is a mathematician with an interest in physics at large scales. The observational evidence is thin and open to interpretation - the perfect setting for a highly disciplined scientist.
 
Xyooj said:
when do a person earn that title?
...

When you say title it sounds like you are talking about degrees, like PhD, and professorship ranks. It has institutional connotations.

Some universities have a separate department of Astronomy, or a department of Astrophysics, which is separate from the main Physics department. In other universities Astronomy is included in the Physics department.

So in some cases you would just get a PhD in Physics and you would then do your research in cosmology. Cosmology would be your specialization. there is not always a separate TITLE for a research specialty. People would get to know that your special interest was cosmology after you had published some papers in that field.

If you got to be promoted to a professorship, then you would be Professor of Physics, or Professor of Astronomy, depending on how the departments were organized. But you would not normally have a title like "Professor of Cosmology".
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The people I think of as cosmologists are people whose work I know, the ones I see being invited to give the featured talks about cosmology at conferences, and being invited to write the major survey papers reviewing the progress in their specialty. They are usually the ones whose papers are highly cited by other researchers in that field.

I don't think there is an official certificate. It is just a type of astronomer.
 
marcus said:
Some universities have a separate department of Astronomy, or a department of Astrophysics, which is separate from the main Physics department. In other universities Astronomy is included in the Physics department.
...or in some universities Astronomy is a part of the mathematics department :wink:

To the OP: I think marcus gives quite a good description of whom would be considered a professional cosmologist.
 
marcus said:
The people I think of as cosmologists are people whose work I know, the ones I see being invited to give the featured talks about cosmology at conferences, and being invited to write the major survey papers reviewing the progress in their specialty. They are usually the ones whose papers are highly cited by other researchers in that field.

I'm assuming you're using "I" to mean "I and other gurus like me". Otherwise the title has gone to your head :smile: But if so, by your definition, Friedmann was not a cosmologist for most of the 1920s.
 
Friedman also wasn't alive for most of the 1920s.
 

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