Sept. 28, 1999, updated Oct. 12, 1999 During the week of Sept. 20, discussions between members of the Neutrino Factory/Muon Collider Collaboration and the NSF resulted in an opportunity to present the case for R&D towards a (non-site-specific) design study for a neutrino factory. A written document is due about Nov. 1, 1999 (VERY SOON!). Then, we will present the case to an NSF review panel on Nov. 29, 1999. At that time, Andy Sessler will present an overview of a neutrino factory, I will sketch the physics case, and Maury Tigner will close with remarks on the desirable relation between the NSF, universities and national laboratories in the context of a neutrino factory. The document should include at least 3 components: 1. The physics case for a neutrino factory. 2. A technical sketch of a neutrino factory. 3. A preliminary sketch of an R&D program that might be supported by the NSF Major Research Equipment program; perhaps $25-30M over a 3-year period, beginning in 2002. This funding would be complementary to that we anticipate from the U.S. Department of Energy. The positive outcome of this exercise is a call to write an actual proposal for R&D funds, to be submitted about June 1, 2000. Plus, the NSF may be able to provide interim funding to small proposals related to neutrino factory R&D, which proposals should be submitted separately. In a happy scenario, the NSF might participate in the design and construction of a muon collider via the MRE program, with larger yearly (>> $10M/yr) funding beginning around 2005. The Spokesperson and Executive Board of the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider Collaboration have asked me to assemble/edit the written document, and we seek your help on this. This help can take any/all of several forms: 1. Discussion of how to proceed in dealing with both large and small issues. We anticipate setting up an e-mail forum for this, but in the time being, feel free to contact me at mcdonald@puphep.princeton.edu 2. Contributions to the document. We need text, figures and tables by Oct. 15, to permit final editing during the following 2 weeks. In view of the time, such contributions will generally exist already. 3. Signing the doscument. Policy here is not final. Since the nominal goal is funds for accelerator R&D, I believe the Letter should be submitted by the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider Collaboration. However, the importance of the document to the NSF is as a measure of interest in the neutrino factory, especially its physics program. Hence, it appears advantageous if the author list is as large as possible. This leads to the following issue: 4. Recruiting physicists interested in either/both the experimental and accelerator physics of a neutrino factory. An immediate aspect of such recruitment would be their signing the Letter. Rather soon, though, we would need to expand the character of the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider Collaboration with a new entity either part of or parallel to the existing structure. The new group would have the character of a Users' Group, and would play a large role in advancing the physics case for a neutrino factory; It is beyond the scope of the effort needed for the NSF Letter of Intent to organize such a Users' Group -- which will undoubtedly evolve somewhat separately. ----------------------- Activities related to preparation of the NSF document will be viewable at the site http://puhep1.princeton.edu/mumu/NSFLetter/ The NSF initiative is formally separate from the Fermilab effort towards a site-specific study due Mar. 31, 2000. However, the physics goal is the same, the interested parties are largely the same, and we anticipate close interaction between the efforts to produce both documents. The web site for the Fermilab study is http://www.fnal.gov/projects/muon_collider/nu/study/study.html --Kirk McDonald, Sept. 28, 1999. for the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider Collaboration