-- SLAC's major high-energy physics program for the coming decade will enable scientists to investigate the matter-antimatter symmetry in nature. Masthead1
 
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News and press releases

BABAR Observes the Ground State of Bottomonium 
On July 7, the BABAR Collaboration reported the first observation of the ground state of the b-anti-b quark system ("bottomonium") to Physical Review Letters. The ground state, called the
ηb  ("eta-sub-b"), was seen in the decay Υ(3S) γηb. [read more...]. (July 8, 2008)

BABAR Finds First Evidence for Charm Meson Mixing
At the 2007 Moriond Electroweak conference in Italy on March 13, the BABAR Collaboration presented the first evidence for charm meson mixing,
a process in which an electrically-neutral charm meson decays as its anti-particle partner [read more...]. (March 13, 2007)

Updated: July 08, 2008

[BABAR Home Page for Collaborators]

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BaBar Image Gallery
image gallery border Wide angle view of the BaBar Detector BaBar Image Gallery. Click on the orange dot for more information about each image.
Looking down on the BaBar Detector during construction
Close-up view of technicians working on the BaBar Detector
DIRC Chamber of the BABAR Detector
Silicon Strip Detector
3-D renderings of the BaBar Detector
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For each particle of matter there exists an equivalent particle with opposite quantum characteristics, called an anti-particle. Particle and anti-particle pairs can be created by large accumulations of energy and, conversely, when a particle meets an anti-particle they annihilate with intense blasts of energy. At the time of the big-bang, the large accumulation of energy must have created an equal amount of particles and anti-particles. But in  everyday life we do not encounter anti-particles. The question, therefore, is "What has happened to the anti-particles?"

BABAR is a High Energy Physics experiment located at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, near Stanford University, in California.

The goal of the experiment is to study the violation of charge and parity (CP) symmetry in the decays of B mesons. This violation manifests itself as different behaviour between particles and anti-particles and is the first step to explain the absence of anti-particles in everyday life.

To study CP violation the BABAR experiment exploits the 9.1 GeV electron beam and the 3 GeV positron beam of the PEP-II accelerator. The two beams collide in the center of the experiment, producing Υ(4S) mesons which decay into equal numbers of B and anti-B mesons.


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