Colliding-Beam Experiments

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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.


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This is a fairly simplistic explanation to a very mathematical problem. To understand the reason why circular accelerators can deal with higher energies than linear accelerators, it is necessary to explore the physics of momenta and collisions.