Hi, I'm pretty new here, but I'm looking for some advice.
I'm currently finishing up my bachelor's in physics with a specialty in astrophysics, but I'm also enrolled in my school's dual bachelor's/master's enrollment program. This basically means that my bachelor's takes four years, but during that time, I start taking graduate courses that count for both my bachelor's and master's degrees. I'll finish my bachelor's in May, then start full-time graduate study in the summer, and I should finish my master's sometime in 2013.
After this, my plan's a little hazy. I know I want to get my PhD, but I don't know if I should stay at my school to get it, or if I should go elsewhere. The problem is twofold: First, I feel like if I stay where I am, I'll keep getting pushed in a research direction that I'm not necessarily that interested in. Second, there are some major political issues in the physics department at my school that I'm not entirely sure I want to deal with while I'm attempting to get my PhD done. These are most likely unavoidable, as I have technically already associated myself with one of the major causes thanks to my undergraduate research job and senior project, as well as my proposed master's thesis. I know there are probably department politics anywhere I go, but these are pretty severe- the optics group is pretty pissed at the direction the physics department is heading (both in research positions and courses offered), and the solar physics group is the cause.
Research-wise, what I'm doing now and what I will be doing for my master's is in the realm of solar physics. I'm not all that interested in solar physics- I'd like to get more into observational astronomy/astrophysics. I'm not really sure what specifically I'd like to study, I just know I'd prefer to look at something further than the Sun. My current research adviser says there's more research money and opportunities in solar physics, and that I can always get my PhD by doing something in solar physics, then switch over to something I'm more interested in afterwards. However, due to some of the politics in the department, I think some of her advising me towards solar physics might be motivated by the chance to recruit a PhD student- she's currently applying for the newly-opened tenure-track position, and this could give her an edge.
However, I'm fairly well-established where I'm at. I've got a good research job that's giving me good data analysis experience (not to mention earned me co-authorship on a paper), and my proposed master's thesis involves a NASA project that actually seems somewhat interesting. I like my adviser, the city, and the other graduate students as well.
Can anyone point me towards any statistics on where research money is being spent, or maybe give me some ideas on what interesting topics are being discussed in astrophysics/astronomy? Recommendations on good grad schools in this area are also welcome, as are any suggestions on how I should handle the situation (leave, stay, ect.).
