Keith Baker - Hampton University / Jefferson Laboratory
* Gaseous wire chambers (simulations, detector
R&D)
* New technologies for tracking
* Some
issues suggested by Keith to look at
Rene Bellwied - Wayne State University
* Silicon drift detector simulation and
detector R&D
(current project is "SD" pattern
recognition)
Mikhail Dubrovin - Wayne State University
* Gaseous chambers
* Monte Carlo issues related to drift
chambers
Rich Galik - Cornell University
* General support of Cornell efforts in tracking
Dan Peterson - Cornell University
* Pattern recognition
* New technology for TPC readout optimization
Keith Riles - University of Michigan
* Global tracking simulation issues
(physics impact of tracker
design and pattern recognition)
Ian Shipsey - Purdue University
* Advance micropattern gas detector readout,
especially
electrodeless GEMS as novel
versions of micromegas.
Main thrust of work is to
evaluate reliability of MPGD's
for this application; main
method is via multiple
preamplification structures.
Haijun Yang - University of Michigan
* Global tracking simulation issues
(physics impact of tracker
design and pattern recognition)
--------------------------------------------------------
Members with long-term interests in consortium
tracking work
and observers affiliated with other consortia
/ funding arrangements:
Dave Cinabro - Wayne State University
K.K. Gan - Ohio State University
John Hobbs - SUNY, Stony Brook
Dean Karlen - Carleton University
Mike Ronan - LBNL
Bruce Schumm - UC Santa Cruz
Ron Settles - MPI-Munich