As a professor writing to another professor, should I use 〜さん (like in other workplaces) or 〜先生?
Since you're writing to a teacher, you must stick to 先生. This is the same even if you are a university president, a prime minister or a Nobel Prize winner. Don't use さん unless they have become your personal friend.
As a professor writing to a junior staff member (doctoral student or post-doc), what is the right form of address?
- If that staff member holds a title as a teacher (e.g., 教諭, 助教, 講師, and of course, 教授), always use 先生.
- If that staff member holds a license such as a medical license, which warrants being called 先生 even by the general public, then you use 先生, too.
- For post-doc researchers or research assistants who do not hold such titles or licenses, you can use さん in direct conversations or when addressing your subordinates in emails. Use 様 in emails to those outside your research group.
君 is still commonly used in some universities (慶應義塾's convention is well-known), but generally it's an outdated convention in business/academic settings.