- #1
blade2011
- 4
- 0
As a second year graduate student, I've been working in a quantum chromodynamics group for some time. I haven't published, but I am getting interested in many other things such as condensed matter physics, quantum computing, etc. Also I had an engineering degree with a physics minor, and originally hep-ph got me into grad school.
So I am thinking..how easy is it to switch areas after phd? Say I went on and continued to work on strong interactions or something, how easy would it be to get a postdoc in condensed matter physics, or experimental physics? Would my engineering degree help at that time, even though my phd would be in something else?
So I am thinking..how easy is it to switch areas after phd? Say I went on and continued to work on strong interactions or something, how easy would it be to get a postdoc in condensed matter physics, or experimental physics? Would my engineering degree help at that time, even though my phd would be in something else?