This page contains information on CDF graduate students' theses and links to electronic versions when available. There is also a page on "Tips for Writing a CDF Thesis" which is a loose collection of information that might prove useful.
All students should check to make sure the information listed for them is correct. To add or update information please fill in the form below:
This page is no longer maintained!
CDF theses are now stored electronically in the CDF Notes database in a manner accessible to the general public (Many thanks to Glenn Cooper for getting this working!). If you have access to the database you can search for all CDF theses using the CDF Note classification="THESIS". There are links to the electronic versions in the Completed Theses listing as well.
Fermilab requires all students to submit their theses electronically. The instructions are below. After a thesis has been submitted electronically to Fermilab, it will also be added to the SPIRES database (this can take a few weeks to a month; Kathryn Duerr was taking care of this in May 2007). If you have a reasonably sized source file, you can try submitting it to the arxiv as well, at http://arxiv.org/help/submit.
Fermilab Information
Resources
Searchable Database
of Theses
kept by the Fermilab Publications Office.
Instructions for Submitting Theses to Fermilab
For students with theses in progress, there is an experimental webpage
attempting to keep a worldwide index of current doctoral theses in
progress, to prevent duplication and enable communication between
researchers. The site is still in the beginning stages, but might be
of interest. Check it out at
www.phddata.org.
If you have comments or suggestions, send email to the CDF
spokespeople.
Back to CDF Home Page
This page is no longer regularly maintained.
Last modified: Tue Jan 24 CDT 2012