Report of the TeV 2000 Working Group

From the forward of the Report:

The TeV 2000 ``workshop'' was a grass-roots effort motivated by the richness of the physics at the Tevatron, the lack of an organized study of the Tevatron long range potential, and the notion that facilities planning for U.S. HEP in these times would do well to include a study of ``what we could do with what we've got''. It started with a two day meeting at the University of Michigan on October 21st and 22nd of 1994 to form an ad hoc partnership between CDF, D0 , and the theoretical community. More than 100 physicists attended and divided into seven working groups to begin the exploration of the physics. This ``extended workshop'' continued throughout the winter, spring, and summer of 1995 on many U.S. campuses and at Fermilab. During this period, work within the Fermilab Accelerator Division reached the point of designing a Pbar Recycler ring for the Main Injector project, and the high luminosity Tevatron was poised to move from a concept to an engineering design phase. We believe the physics case is now at a similar level of maturity.

The goals of the TeV 2000 effort were:

We have accomplished both goals with the completion of this report. The physics program that we have found is broad and has compelling programmatic components as well as significant discovery potential.

Chapters I, II, and X are included with each of the other chapters.

May 23, 1996. Bill Bardeen