Mer de Glace, Chamonix, 1986

Tim Cox @ CERN

Last update 06-Mar-2012

Hello. I am Tim Cox, and these web pages mostly relate to my work on the Endcap Muon CSC subdetector of the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The photo on the right shows my wife and me standing above the Mer de Glace, in Chamonix, sometime in 1986 or 1987. How much has climate warming reduced the glacier in the intervening 25 years? The photo below is the early morning silhouette of the Alps to the east of Geneva, taken at 8 am on 23 December 2002.

The basic topic pages of this web site are shown in the navigation palette at the top left of each page. The main CMS web and CSC twiki links are below; the first link is the formal address of this home page. Since I am convener of the CSC Detector Performance Group, most CSC-related information now goes directly to the CSC DPG twiki page and is - I am sorry to say - unavailable to non-members of CMS.

Dr. Peter Timothy Cox

University of California at Davis
Department of Physics
1 Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616, USA

(530) 754-7226


Currently based at CERN:

Building 40-3-A02
CERN, CH1211 Geneva 23
Switzerland

41-22-767-1601
Mobile: 076-487-2044 (at CERN: 16-2044)

Geneva 8am 23-Dec-2002