This is file http://www.nevis.columbia.edu/~seligman/ccfr/thesis/eps This directory "points" to files that contain all of the important (and many of the unimportant) figures from William Seligman's thesis. These figures are freely available for talks and papers as long as the appropriate reference is given (W. Seligman, Ph.D. Thesis (Columbia University), Nevis Report 292, 1997). Most of these figures are stored in Encapsulated Postscript format (eps). I was told that graphics stored in this form are easy to include in LaTeX files, and they are fully supported by MS-Word, Adobe Illustrator, and probably many other programs as well. The rest of the figures are in standard Postscript (ps) format, which does not include a built-in preview and hence may be more difficult to include in word-processing documents. The name of the file's link relates to the figures location in the thesis. The format of the name is: figX-Y.eps or figX-Y.ps where X and Y are the chapter and figure numbers from my thesis; for example, fig8-11.eps contains Figure 8-11. Within the seligman/ps/plots-bw and seligman/ps/plots-color directories, I have saved the files with human-readable names; for example, fig8-11.eps is linked to the name alpha-experiments.eps. Therefore, you don't have to go thumbing through my thesis each time you want a plot; just list the contents of this directory using ls -l. Frequently Asked Questions -------------------------- Actually, I've just set up this directory, and no one has asked me any questions yet. Here are some questions I think might be asked: "Can you give me the TopDrawer (or kumac) file that created the plot?" Almost all the plots in my thesis were created with a scientific analysis program for the Macintosh called Igor (it's the scientist's assistant, get it?). I'm happy to send the Igor files to anyone who asks, but unless you also have Igor the file won't do you much good. "Can you give me the data files that created the plot?" If enough people send in requests, I will create a subdirectory called igor/ that will contain the data used to create plots in Igor export format. These files are in plain text and are readily convertable to TopDrawer, PAW, or any other plotting package that accepts text input. Note that some plots, notably the CCFR vs. charged-lepton experiments of Chapter 8, are complex overlays of three sub-plots per page and would take time for me to prepare in text format.