In this article
Welcome to the world of science & astronomy
Whether you're captivated by space and the big questions, or you want to understand a deep scientific career, this guide covers what an astronomer actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An astronomer studies celestial objects and the universe using observation and physics. In simple terms: they study stars, planets, and galaxies to understand the cosmos. Think of them as the students of the universe.
- Study celestial objects and phenomena
- Analyse astronomical data
- Use telescopes and instruments
- Advance our understanding of the universe
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Curiosity โ the universe is the question
- Analytical mind โ astronomy is data-heavy
- Rigour โ careful science
- Patience โ discovery is slow
- Maths and physics โ the language of the cosmos
- Persistence โ big questions take time
Education & qualifications
Astronomers need a physics or astronomy degree and almost always a PhD โ one of the most knowledge-intensive, specialist scientific careers.
Typical responsibilities
- Observation โ celestial objects
- Analysis โ astronomical data
- Instruments โ telescopes and tools
- Modelling โ physics of the cosmos
- Research โ the big questions
- Writing โ sharing discovery
Responsibilities by seniority
PhD / Postdoc
0โ6 years
- Researches under guidance
- Analyses data
- Builds expertise
- Publishing first work
- Toward independent research
Astronomer / Researcher
6โ12 years
- Leads research
- Wins telescope time
- Publishes findings
- Trusted expert
- Specialising
Senior / Professor
12+ years
- Leads research programmes
- Shapes the field
- Wins funding
- Mentors astronomers
- Top of the field
Where astronomers work
๐ Universities
Academic research.
๐ญ Observatories
Telescope facilities.
๐ฐ๏ธ Space agencies
NASA, ESA, etc.
๐๏ธ Research institutes
Dedicated research.
๐ป Data / industry
Data science crossover.
๐ก Instrumentation
Building instruments.
A day in the life
Analysing data from a telescope โ light from objects millions of light-years away.
Modelling the physics, testing how the data fits theories of the cosmos.
Programming and processing huge astronomical datasets.
Writing up findings, contributing to humanity's understanding of the universe.
An observing run โ gathering data from the night sky. The student of the universe. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Intellectually profound
- Study the universe
- Cutting-edge science
- Deep specialist expertise
- Data and physics skills
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Intellectually profound
- Study the universe
- Cutting-edge science
- Deep specialist expertise
- Data and physics skills
- Highly transferable to data science
- Globally collaborative
โ Disadvantages
- Very competitive field
- Long PhD path
- Funding-dependent
- Modest academic pay
- Job insecurity early on
- Few permanent positions
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Researcher โ lead research
- Professor โ academic leadership
- Research Director โ lead a group
- Data Science โ industry crossover
- Space agency roles โ mission science
- Science communication โ public outreach
Astronomer vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astronomer You are here | Studies the universe | Astrophysics, data | Baseline | Hard |
| Researcher | Investigates and discovers | Research, analysis | Lower-similar | Hard |
| Data Analyst | Turns data into insight | Analysis, data | Lower | Medium |
| Chemist | Studies chemicals and reactions | Chemistry, science | Similar | Hard |
| Mechanical Engineer | Designs machines | Engineering, physics | Lower-similar | Hard |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Astronomy is a small, competitive field, but its data and physics skills are highly transferable, and human curiosity about the universe ensures it endures.
- Curiosity about the universe endures
- Big questions still unanswered
- Data skills are highly transferable
- New telescopes drive discovery
- Small but enduring field
Fun facts ๐ค
Astronomers study light that left distant stars millions of years ago.
They tackle the biggest questions โ how the universe began and what it's made of.
Astronomy is incredibly data-heavy โ skills that transfer to data science.
It's one of the most knowledge-intensive careers โ a PhD is essential.
New telescopes and missions keep discovery alive.
Myths about this role
"Astronomers look through telescopes all night."
โ Most work is data analysis and physics, often by day โ not just stargazing.
"Anyone can do it."
โ It takes a physics degree, a PhD, and deep expertise.
"It's not useful."
โ Astronomy drives data science, physics, and technology.
"It's easy to get a job."
โ It's small and very competitive, with few permanent posts.
"It's not well-paid."
โ Academic pay is modest, but the skills transfer to well-paid data roles.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Are captivated by the universe
- Love physics and maths
- Are analytical and data-driven
- Are persistent and patient
- Want deep, profound work
- Enjoy research
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a well-trodden career path
- You dislike deep study
- You want high, stable pay
- You dislike data and maths
- You want quick results
- You avoid competition
Deep & profound
Astronomer is a deep, specialist, intellectually profound scientific career, where curiosity about the universe meets rigorous physics and data, with highly transferable skills despite a small, competitive field.
โ Advantages
- Intellectually profound
- Study the universe
- Cutting-edge science
- Deep specialist expertise
- Transferable data skills
โ Challenges
- Very competitive field
- Long PhD path
- Funding-dependent
- Modest academic pay
- Few permanent positions
How to get started
- Study physics or astronomy the essential foundation.
- Do a PhD almost always required.
- Research and publish build your expertise.
- Win telescope time and funding establish your name.
- Advance senior researcher, professor, or data science.
What to know before you start
- Most work is data and physics, not stargazing
- It takes a physics degree and a PhD
- The data skills transfer to well-paid roles
- It's small and very competitive
- Curiosity about the universe endures
- New telescopes keep discovery alive
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People picture astronomers gazing through telescopes all night. The reality is most of my work is analysing data and doing physics, often during the day. The light arrives, the telescope records it, and then the real work โ making sense of it โ happens at a computer.
Astronomer ยท 8 years in
It's one of the most competitive fields in science. The PhD is long, funding is tight, and permanent positions are few. You do it because you're captivated by the universe โ the biggest questions there are. If that pull is real, nothing else compares.
Astronomer ยท 11 years in
What people don't realise is how transferable the skills are. Astronomy is incredibly data-heavy โ huge datasets, programming, statistics โ so even those who leave academia often move into well-paid data science. The training opens doors well beyond the stars.
Professor ยท 18 years in