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Me at Fermilab |
Welcome to my web site!
On this home page, I'll introduce my past and present research interests. Currently, I am working on the CMS project with the UCLA high energy physics group.
Latest News: I will begin the PhD program in physics at Princeton University in the fall!
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My full name is Jeremy Werner and I am a senior undergraduate physics student at UCLA. As you may have figured out, my field of interest is experimental high energy physics (HEP). I am currently working on the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) project with the group at my university. CMS will be one of two big general-purpose particle detectors used at the new accelerator, the LHC, that is being built at the CERN laboratory in Geneva. When the LHC turns on in 2007 it will be the highest energy accelerator ever built, and the most important tool for studying fundamental physics in the future. This past summer I researched accelerator simulations at Fermilab, which is near Chicago. Fermilab is home of the Tevatron, the highest energy accelerator in existence today. Be sure to check out my past and current research by clicking on the link in the upper left.
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