r/Physics 6d ago

employed physicist

Those of you who have completed research physics and are currently working, how is it, what exactly do you do, are you satisfied, do you work inside your country (and if yes, which one) or abroad, online, how difficult was it for you to get your current job?

53 Upvotes

78 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

5

u/RoundElephant5876 6d ago

Are you satisfied with your job? Are you still able to work in research alongside your current job? Is working as a physicist what you expected it to be? I am a highschool student currently and I have to choose the college I will go to. I am in between medicine and physics so if you could share more how does your current job as a medical physicist look like, do you think it combines both parts? Do you think love and interest towards physics are enough to study it? What would you say do you still love it or has it become a job like any other? I am sorry for so many questions I don't have anyone to ask. Feel free to write whenever you have time. I appreciate it, thank you!

25

u/QuantumMechanic23 6d ago edited 6d ago

No. I'm not satisfied with my job. The usage of physics is negligible. If you just do what is required and no more, you can end up as a glorified technician. Some people don't consider me a physicist despite my title. For example, see here where a PhD physicist doesn't consider me a real physicist:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Physics/s/5Pyd70RPyt

Is it what I expected it to be? No. I think on all the career talks and open days I attended the use of physics and incorporation was grossly over-exaggerated unfortunately.

My hospital is attached to a university (not common in medical physics) . We can be involved in clinical research, but I enjoy physics and maths. I am an honorary lecturer in mediacal physics for the University. I am new to my job, so I will try to involve some physical and mathematical research into my work and hopefully collaborate with someone in the university. I don't know if this is possible, but I will try. If not possible... I may try a career change in a few years when I have enough money.

I do not think it is a good blend of medicine and physics. I think medical physics is it's own unique thing... (shadow one to actually see how it is).

I feel like a exception in medical physics. Most of my colleagues are very good, and that they go out their way to implement new technology that betters treatment for patients. They are not the ones making or designing the technology, that is the vendor (companies). I on the other hand still love physics and maths and I try to implement it into my work as much as possible. Since I am new, I have yet to see how doable this task it. I will know when I get in contact with my university and share my research ideas.

All jobs, even in pure physics research just feel like jobs at the end of the day. Even pure research physicist spend more time doing excel, writing grants, trying to publish papers to secure funding, making presentations etc. Compared to writing on a blackboard all day. Plus there are a lot of funding cuts happening in physics research all around the world... Scary times.

See here : https://www.linkedin.com/posts/sarah-heywood-8818aa88_last-week-was-a-difficult-week-at-the-university-share-7462076680191451137-7gay/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_android&rcm=ACoAADtnoPsBAPAqu5DTatGtRoLoUeJxSi8tF7E

Although my job is comparitivley more boring, it pays better and is more secure than research physics. It also has the immediate benefit that I'm saving people's lives, whereas many working in theory can go whole lifetimes without managing to achieve anything useful.

Any more questions please ask.

4

u/RoundElephant5876 5d ago

Im sorry to hear that you aren't satisfied. If it means anything to you I consider you a physicist. I hope you will be able to incorporate research into your work in the near future. Best of luck! And thank you for your answers!

2

u/xrelaht Condensed matter physics 4d ago

I am not a MP, but I want to add a couple things since I know a few of them. One is that there are MPs who design instruments, and using physics is a much more daily thing for them than it is for someone using those instruments while working in a hospital. Another is that I have a friend who worked as an MP in a hospital for about five years post-PhD before deciding he wanted to get back to doing the kind of research which caused us to meet, and he’s told me the work he did there is still the thing he’s most proud of.

Also, anyone who claims MPs aren’t “real” physicists is just spouting nonsense. They either don’t understand what being an MP involves or have an overly grandiose idea of what research physicists do. Most of what you do in any scientific job ends up being the same administrative tasks, even if you’re working as a researcher. At least MPs still get to work with instruments!