Belle experiment

in Tsukuba-shi, Japan



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Japan, 〒300-4246 Ibaraki-ken, Tsukuba-shi, Kamisawa 大学共同利用機関法人高エネルギー加速器研究機構
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N36° 9' 28" E140° 4' 31"   (36.157777777778, 140.07527777778)
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The Belle experiment is a particle physics experiment conducted by the Belle Collaboration, an international collaboration of more than 400 physicists and engineers investigating CP-violation effects at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation (KEK) in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan.
The Belle detector, located at the collision point of the e−e+ asymmetric-energy collider (KEKB), is a multilayer particle detector. Its large solid angle coverage, vertex location with precision on the order of tens of micrometres (provided by a silicon vertex detector), good pion–kaon separation at the momenta range from 7002100000000000000♠100 MeV/c till few GeV/c (provided by a novel Cherenkov detector), and few-percent precision electromagnetic calorimetry (CsI(Tl) scintillating crystals) allow for many other scientific searches apart from CP-violation. Extensive studies of rare decays, searches for exotic particles and precision measurements of B mesons, D mesons, and tau particles have been carried out and have resulted in almost 300 publications in physics journals.
Highlights of the Belle experiment so far include
the first observation of CP-violation outside of the kaon system (2001)
observation of:



B


K





l

+



l






{\displaystyle B\to K^{*}l^{+}l^{-}}
and



b

s

l

+



l






{\displaystyle b\to sl^{+}l^{-}}

measurement of




ϕ

3




{\displaystyle \phi _{3}}
using the



B

D
K
,
D


K

S



π

+



π






{\displaystyle B\to DK,D\to K_{S}\pi ^{+}\pi ^{-}}
Dalitz plot
measurement of the CKM quark mixing matrix elements




|


V

u
b



|



{\displaystyle |V_{ub}|}
and




|


V

c
b



|



{\displaystyle |V_{cb}|}

observation of direct CP-violation in




B

0




π

+



π






{\displaystyle B^{0}\to \pi ^{+}\pi ^{-}}
and




B

0




K





π

+




{\displaystyle B^{0}\to K^{-}\pi ^{+}}

observation of



b

d


{\displaystyle b\to d}
transitions
evidence for



B

τ
ν


{\displaystyle B\to \tau
u }

observations of a number of new particles including the X(3872)
The Belle experiment operated at the KEKB accelerator, the world's highest luminosity machine. The instantaneous luminosity exceeded 7034210999999999999♠2.11×1034 cm−2·s−1. The integrated luminosity collected at the ϒ(4S) resonance mass is ~7002710000000000000♠710 fb−1 (corresponds to 771 million BB meson pairs). Most data is recorded on the ϒ(4S) resonance, which decays to pairs of B mesons. About 10% of the data is recorded below the ϒ(4S) resonance in order to study backgrounds. In addition, Belle has carried out special runs at the ϒ(5S) resonance to study B
s mesons as well as on the ϒ(1S), ϒ(2S) and ϒ(3S) resonances to search for evidence of Dark Matter and the Higgs Boson. The samples of ϒ(1S), ϒ(2S) and ϒ(5S) collected by Belle are the world largest samples available.
The Belle II B-factory, an upgraded facility with two orders of magnitude more luminosity, has been approved in June 2010. The design and construction work is ongoing.

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Belle experiment

Address: Japan, 〒300-4246 Ibaraki-ken, Tsukuba-shi, Kamisawa 大学共同利用機関法人高エネルギー加速器研究機構
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