Benefits to the U.S. from Physicists Working at Accelerators Overseas
Jacob Anderson, Raymond Brock, Yuri Gershtein, Nicholas Hadley,, Michael Harrison, Meenakshi Narain, Jason Nielsen, Fred Olness, Bjoern, Penning, Michael Peskin, Eric Prebys, Marc Ross, Salvatore Rappoccio, Abraham, Seiden, Ryszard Stroynowski

TL;DR
This paper discusses how U.S. participation in international accelerators benefits the U.S. economy, technology, and scientific workforce through contributions to hardware, analysis, and global collaboration.
Contribution
It highlights the specific advantages of U.S. involvement in overseas accelerators, emphasizing technological and educational benefits.
Findings
U.S. contributions to experimental hardware and analysis.
Advancements in accelerator technology and components.
Educational benefits from U.S. students and postdocs in global projects.
Abstract
We illustrate benefits to the U.S. economy and technological infrastructure of U.S. participation in accelerators overseas. We discuss contributions to experimental hardware and analysis and to accelerator technology and components, and benefits stemming from the involvement of U.S. students and postdoctoral fellows in global scientific collaborations. Contributed to the proceedings of the Snowmass 2013 Community Summer Study.
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolar Research and Ecology · Conferences and Exhibitions Management
