Standard Model Higgs Searches at the Tevatron

Harald Fox (Lancaster University)

The Higgs boson is the only Standard Model particle that has not yet been discovered. Experimental and theoretical constraints predict its existence in a mass range of 113~GeV to 182~GeV. The search for the standard model Higgs boson is the main task of the Tevatron collider at Fermilab, at present the world's highest energy collider with centre-of-mass energy of 2~TeV. The combined sensitivity of the D0 and CDF experiments approaches the expected standard model cross section for Higgs masses around 160~GeV. The Higgs analyses of the Tevatron experiments are reviewed and the status of the latest measurements is presented.