Nuclear Engineering
Nuclear engineering involves the design, analysis, development, testing, operation and maintenance of nuclear fission systems and components, specially, nuclear reactors, nuclear power plants and/or nuclear weapons. The research side of the nuclear engineering can be extremely creative, but the field is best suited for those who won't feel confined in large, bureaucratic work environments.
Nuclear engineers generally have to work in extended teams, and caution and risk control are the bywords of the industry--appropriately so, given the dangers of nuclear radiation. Military and civilian nuclear power engineers have almost similar skills, and the government frequently hires nuclear engineers with experience in the various nuclear fields it regulates.
Nuclear Engineers should scrupulously determine how a system should work and how various changes in conditions will affect the outcomes, identify elegant ways to measure and improve system performance, notice when something is amiss or is likely to go wrong, grasp new information or materials by studying and working with them, use ingenious reasoning to discover answers to problems.