The Belle II experiment

On the track of the antimatter puzzle

Why is there matter in the universe, but hardly any antimatter? Researchers are pursuing this question at the Belle II experiment in Japan. In the particle accelerator SuperKEKB, matter (electrons) and antimatter (positrons) are brought into collision. Among the particles produced as a result, the researchers are searching for indications that could explain the surplus of matter.

According to present-day knowledge, this imbalance came to be because a fundamental symmetry property of particles was violated. The physicists hope for new insights from B mesons, with which they already have been able to provide evidence for a violation of this symmetry. This type of particle is created together with its antiparticle when electrons and their antiparticles, positrons, crash into each other.

The SuperKEKB accelerator serves as a "factory" for B mesons. B mesons only live a short time; after the tiniest fractions of a second, they decay into other particles. These decay tracks are recorded by the Belle II detector and analyzed. So that the differences in the decay patterns of the B mesons and their antiparticles can be seen, the detector must exactly measure the locations where they decay. That's why, in the innermost area of Belle II, there sits a high-resolution pixel vertex detector – a type of precision camera – that the MPP took a leading role in developing.

 

Ready for future measurements

Starting in 2011, the research plant was completely overhauld too improve its physics measurements. In the future, about 750 meson pairs will be produced, i.e. 30 times the production rate achieved by the KEKB predecessor. In parallel, also the former Belle detector was modernized to the new version Belle II. The first measure run started in March 2019.

Matter and antimatter

After the Big Bang there came into being heavy particles of matter and antimatter that have yet to be identified. These primordial particles decayed into the particles and antiparticles familiar today: quarks and antiquarks, electrons and postrons, muons and antimuons, and so on.

If a particle and its corresponding antiparticle meet, they transform themselves into energy; they mutually annihilate each other. Therefore no material should have been able to form in the universe – at least not permanently.

Admittedly, atoms, molecules, stars, planets, and galaxies provide us with conclusive evidence for the existence of matter. Physicists suspect that the heavy primordial particles decayed differently: Somewhat more matter particles formed than antimatter particles – that is, more quarks than antiquarks, more electrons than positrons, and so on. As matter and antimatter mutually annihilate each other, all that remained in the universe was the small excess of matter.

Belle II at the MPP

Belle II: Successful BEAST detector installation

Preparations for the new Belle II detector at the modernized SuperKEKB accelerator in Japan are in full swing. A few months ago, Belle II was rolled into position in the accelerator ring. Individual detector system tests will now follow: on November…

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Belle II has reached its destination in the accelerator SuperKEKB.

Milestone at the Belle II experiment: Detector was “rolled-in” to the collision point of the accelerator

The High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) successfully completed the "roll-in" of the Belle II detector. This is an important milestone for the international Belle II collaboration and the SuperKEKB accelerator.

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Two detector modules are bonded together “head to head”.

Belle II: MPP commences production of double silicon chips for pixel detector

The SuperKEKB accelerator in Japan is still “awaiting” the arrival of “its” detector: Belle II. In a few months, the detector is to be inserted into the accelerator ring for the first time – the first measurements are planned for 2018. The MPP…

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Federal Minister Johanna Wanka visits the Belle II experiment

Prof. Johanna Wanka, federal minister for education and research, recently toured the Belle II experiment at the Japanese accelerator facility KEK. The Belle detector is currently being modernized to analyze particle tracks more accurately in the…

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An accelerator starts its comeback – first rounds for particles in the SuperKEKB

First signs of life for the particle accelerator SuperKEKB: Lately electrons and positrons have begun making their rounds in the modernized facility of the Japanese research center KEK. The first collisions electrons and positron beams are expected…

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The Antimatter puzzle: Searching for clues with a highly integrated particle sensor

Researchers in Munich have presented a highly sensitive sensor for precise measurement of particle tracks. This is the first module for the Vertex Detector of the Belle II experiment at the Japanese accelerator center KEK. The detector is expected to…

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MPI for Physics hosts high-energy physics conference

It’s all about high-energy and astroparticle physics at Wildbad Kreuth from Oct. 4 to 9, 2015, when the Max Planck Institute for Physics hosts this year’s International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics (ISMD). Held annually since 1970, the ISMD…

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Jelena Ninković receives Radiation Instrumentation Early Career Award 2014

On this year's IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium in Seattle on 15 November Jelena Ninković received the 2014 Radiation Instrumentation Early Career Award.

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Study of B0->ρ+ρ−decays and implications for the CKM angle φ2
P. Vanhoefer, J. Dalseno, C. Kiesling et al.
Phys. Rev. D 93, 032010 (2016)
arXiv:1510.01245

First Observation of the Decay B0->psi(2S)pi0
V. Chobanova, J. Dalseno, C. Kiesling et al.
Phys. Rev. D 93, 031101 (2016)
arXiv:1512.06895

Measurement of Branching Fractions and CP Asymmetries in B -> wK Decays and First Evidence of CP Violation in B0 -> wKS
V. Chobanova, J. Dalseno, C. Kiesling et al.
Phys. Rev. D 90, 012002 (2014)
arXiv:1311.6666

Measurement of the CP Violation Parameters in B0 -> pi+ pi- Decays
J. Dalseno, K. Prothmann, C. Kiesling et al.
Phys. Rev. D 88, 092003 (2013)
arXiv:1302.0551