Skip Navigation
Search

Adam Jacobs


DEGREE/DEPARMENT
PhD/Physics & Astronomy 
 
YEAR GRADUATED
2016 
 
JOB TITLE
Postdoc 
 
JOB LOCATION
Michigan State University 
 
CONTACT INFO
 
WEBSITE
 
LINKEDIN PAGE

Before going to MSU, Adam was a research assistant and an IACS Jr. Researcher Award winner at Stony Brook University. Here he obtained his PhD, working in the astronomy group under the advisement of Prof. Michael Zingale. He came to Stony Brook by way of a dual degree in physics and computer science from Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas. He was born and raised in Arkansas, growing up in the town of Benton.

Position Description

Adam is a Research Associate at Michigan State University. He joined MSU as a postdoctoral fellow in theoretical nuclear astrophysics in the Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics - Center for the Evolution of the Elements. He works with Prof. Ed Brown and Prof. Hendrik Shatz to push at the frontiers of our understanding of nuclear astrophysics through the study of type I X-Ray bursts and the nuclear reactions that power them.

Typical Day
The typical day for a postdoc is much like that of academics at various stages (e.g. grad students and faculty), but you get to focus fairly exclusively on research. My days often start clearing out my email inbox and scanning the latest papers in my field. Being at an active research university, many days will include the opportunity to attend seminars on a variety of topics relevant to my research. No "knowledge work" is complete without plenty of meetings. I have weekly meetings with collaborators and colleagues to discuss on-going work. Carrying out my research takes a variety of forms that will vary day-to-day, but is usually one of: reading the latest research in my field, writing my own contributions to the latest research in the field, developing code, running and analyzing the results of my code, or mentoring up-and-coming researchers in my department.


Finding the Job 
Finding a job is quite a stressful venture, and the practices vary so much from field-to-field that it's hard to give generally usable advice. In astrophysics, there's a fairly centralized repository of job listings that is used by most of the field. Available positions are posted mostly in early to mid Fall. I knew I wanted to continue down the academic path, at least for the moment, so I scanned this job repository and applied to all positions that looked interesting, a good fit for my expertise, and that would advance my career.  Ultimately, this led me to my current position at MSU.



Advice to Students

Like with finding a job, every discipline is so incredibly different that it's hard to give advice that's not specific to (astro)physics. Given that, the advice I'd give myself were I just starting graduate school today would be to focus very intensely on courses and all other requirements to advance to candidacy. I got involved in many campus activities and research early in my grad career, and while enriching this didn't allow me to make advancing to candidacy my primary focus, leading to avoidable struggles, I ultimately advanced to candidacy, but it could've been a less painful and a shorter process. Once advanced to candidacy or while on your way to it, it's critical to find a research group you can be happy spending years of your life in. The number of available advisors is limited, so you don't have perfect control. But if you focus only on how interesting the research is or how famous your advisor is, you may miss factors like what the working environment is, what your advisor's record is at placing their students in the sorts of positions you'd like upon graduation, what the colleagues (e.g. fellow grad students) you'll be spending years with are like, etc. Be sure when exploring research opportunities that you get a broad perspective. One of the primary motivations for me joining the group I did was the sense of community they fostered and the fact that even when studies or research were frustrating I always knew I had a welcoming, supportive, and pleasant work environment to go to. Finally, always be thinking about the next paper, and be sure to go to conferences at least once a year so that you're engaging the field with your work.