Beam crossing

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Beam_crossing

A beam crossing in a particle collider occurs when two packets of particles, going in opposite directions, reach the same point in space. Most of the particles in each packet cross each other, but a few may collide, producing other particles that may be observed in a particle detector. In a linear collider there is only one location where beam crossings occur, while in a modern accelerator ring there are a few locations (LHC, for example, has four); it is at these points that detectors are placed. * v * t * e * v * t * e rdf:langString
rdf:langString Beam crossing
xsd:integer 2242435
xsd:integer 1070869442
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString December 2009
rdf:langString A beam crossing in a particle collider occurs when two packets of particles, going in opposite directions, reach the same point in space. Most of the particles in each packet cross each other, but a few may collide, producing other particles that may be observed in a particle detector. In a linear collider there is only one location where beam crossings occur, while in a modern accelerator ring there are a few locations (LHC, for example, has four); it is at these points that detectors are placed. * v * t * e * v * t * e
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 834

data from the linked data cloud