Welcome
Discoveries from the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at the Large
Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, promise to revolutionize
our understanding of the universe. More than 900 scientists from 48
institutions in the U.S. participate in the U.S. CMS collaboration,
supported by the Department of Energy and National Science Foundation.
View from the CMS collision hall. (Courtesy Michael Hoch, Adventure Art)
U.S. CMS consists of more than 400 physicists, 200 graduate students and
200 engineers, technicians and computer scientists, making it the largest
national group in the international collaboration. The U.S. collaboration
is making significant contributions to nearly every aspect of the detector
throughout all phases, including construction, installation and preparation
for data-taking. U.S. CMS also plays a major role in the construction and
operation of the experiment’s computing facilities and software that will
be needed to analyze the unprecedented amount of data that CMS will generate.
These highly sophisticated computing tools will allow physicists to operate
the CMS detector, reconstruct the data, analyze it and, ultimately, make
discoveries.
U.S. CMS News
3 December 2008
Fermilab Today
No quiet time for CMS
24 November 2008
MSNBC
Atom Smashers on TV
18 November 2008
Computerworld
Downed Hadron Collider faces $21M in repairs
17 November 2008
Media-Newswire
World's largest atom smasher is subject of free talk Nov. 20
17 November 2008
AFP
Atom-smasher restart delayed further: CERN
17 November 2008
Associated Press
Repairs to Swiss particle collider will cost $25M
10 November 2008
Suite 101
Tevatron, LHC on opposite paths