In a colliding-beam experiment two beams of high-energy particles are made to cross each other.
The advantage of this arrangement is that both beams have significant
kinetic energy (energy of speed),
so a collision between them is more likely to produce a higher mass particle
than would a fixed-target collision at the same energy.
Since we are dealing with particles with a lot of momentum,
these particles have short wavelengths and make excellent probes.