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Bubble Chamber Event. Resonances last typically for a mere 10(-23 power) seconds and therefore leave no discernible track in a bubble chamber. But by calculating back from the energies and angles of the particles that are detected, physicists can infer that a resonance has existed.  In this picture from a bubble chamber at Berkley, an antiproton, coming from below, annihilates with a proton to produces two negative pions, a neutral pion and two positive pions. The negative pions move off to the left, the positive pions to the right, while the pi-zero is undetected. The lower pi-plus decays to a muon, the short piece of track, and then to a positron, which curls out of the picture. The information in the picture is consistent with the lower-energy pions, the lower tracks on left and right-being the decay products of a resonance state known as the omega. Image not dated. Bubble Chamber-1041

Bubble Chamber Event. Resonances last typically for a mere 10(-23 powe...

Digital Preservation File Name and Format: 434-LB-6-XBD9708-03162.TIF Photographs Documenting Scientists, Special Events, and Nuclear Research Facilities, Instruments, and Projects at the Berkeley Lab

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