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belle01
 Image #PN001  Belle Detector   Jul 3, 2002 
Belle detector during beam shut down

by Tokio Ohska

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belle02
 Image #PN002  Belle Detector   Jul 3, 2002 
Belle detector during beam shut down

by Tokio Ohska

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belle03
 Image #PN003  Belle Detector   Jul 3, 2002 
Belle detector during beam shut down

by Tokio Ohska

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belle04
 Image #PN004  Belle CsI   Dec. 1998 
Csl calorimeter is being assembled into the Belle detector in the Tsukuba Experimental Hall

by Tokio Ohska

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belleevent01
 Image #PN005  Belle Event   Nov 2,2001 
Example of a fully reconstructd evrnt in the Belle detector.

by Belle Collaboration

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belleevent01
 Image #PN006  Belle Illustration   2002 
The sectional view of Belle detector


by KEK
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T2KNeutrinoBeamLine01
 Image #PN007  T2K Neutrino Beam Line   Jul 17, 2008 
T2K (Tokai to Kamioka) neutrino beam line nears completion. Built inside the 50 GeV synchrotron, 28 multifunctional quad-dipole superconducting magnets will bend proton beams toward toward Super-Kamiokande, 300 km away neutrino detector.
by A. Yamanaka
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T2KNeutrinoBeamLine02
 Image #PN008  T2K Neutrino Beam Line   Jul 17, 2008 
T2K (Tokai to Kamioka) neutrino beam line nears completion. Built inside the 50 GeV synchrotron, 28 multifunctional quad-dipole superconducting magnets will bend proton beams toward toward Super-Kamiokande, 300 km away neutrino detector.

by A. Yamanaka

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T2KNeutrinoBeamLine02
 Image #PN009  T2K Near Detector   Jun 10, 2008 
T2K Near Detector

by Z. Yamada

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neutrino01
 Image #PN010  K2K Near Detector   Feb, 1999 
Consisting of a 1kton water Cerenkov detector and a fine-grained detector for Long-baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment. The near detector system is located at 300m downstream of the KEK PS beamline production target.

by Tokio Ohska

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neutrino02
 Image #PN011  K2K Neutrino Beam line   May 6, 1999 
Electric Magnet Horn in the Neutrino Beam Line for the K2K experiment.

by Tokio Ohska

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neutrino03
 Image #PN012  K2K Neutrino Beam line   May 6, 1999 
Beam line for K2K neutrino experiment.

by Tokio Ohska

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN013  K2K neutrino events   Fev 26,2000 
Neutrino event detected by the Super-KAMIOKANDE of the K2K experiment.

by K2K Collaboration

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN014  K2K neutrino events   mar 6 1999 
Neutrino event detected by the near detector of the K2K experiment.

by K2K Collaboration

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k2kevent02
 Image #PN015  K2K neutrino events   Jun 19,1999 
The First K2K event at Super-KAMIOKANDE

by K2K Collaboration

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN016  BESS     
BESS collaboration launches a 130 m wide balloon in Alberta, Canada. Once launched, a 2.3 ton detector is airborne for about 24 hours at an altitude of 37 km in the stratosphere, in search of anti-nucleus in the cosmic ray. If any abundances of anti-helium flux were to be found in the data, it might indicate the existence of "anti-matter galaxy". Researchers from KEK has built a compact and light weight superconducting solenoid for the detector.

by BESS Collaboration

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN017  BESS   Dec 13, 2004 
BESS-Polar instrument, launched successfully on December 13 from McMurdo Station, Antarctica, beneath a 40-million-cubic-foot scientific balloon, as big as a football field. To maximize the possibility of finding the antimatter predicted by Hawking, the team is hoping for at least a 10-day flight, or once around the South Pole, in a near-space environment above 99% of the atmosphere. The instrument is circling the Pole at an average altitude of 24 miles (39 kilometers).
BESS-Polar is collaboration among scientists at KEK, the University of Tokyo, Kobe University, and the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, along with NASA and the University of Maryland, College Park. BESS stands for Balloon-borne Experiment with a Superconducting Spectrometer.

by BESS Collaboration

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN018  BESS   Dec 13, 2004 
BESS-Polar instrument, launched successfully on December 13 from McMurdo Station, Antarctica, beneath a 40-million-cubic-foot scientific balloon, as big as a football field. To maximize the possibility of finding the antimatter predicted by Hawking, the team is hoping for at least a 10-day flight, or once around the South Pole, in a near-space environment above 99% of the atmosphere. The instrument is circling the Pole at an average altitude of 24 miles (39 kilometers).
BESS-Polar is collaboration among scientists at KEK, the University of Tokyo, Kobe University, and the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, along with NASA and the University of Maryland, College Park. BESS stands for Balloon-borne Experiment with a Superconducting Spectrometer.

by BESS Collaboration

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k2kevent01
 Image #PN019  BESS       
BESS event observed in the 1999   Alberta-Canada campaign. A 1.18 GeV positive particle penetrated the tracking chamber from top to bottom.

by BESS Collaboration

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KEK050728_01
 Image #  PN020  Belle   Jul. 28, 2005
The Belle Detector.
 

by Joe Nishizawa

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KEK050728_03
 Image #  PN021  Belle   Jul. 28, 2005
The Belle Detector.
 

by Joe Nishizawa

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belleevent01
 Image #PN022  Belle Illustration   2002 
The sectional view of Belle detector


by KEK
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