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At the Tevatron, we make discoveries by taking speeding subatomic particles and smashing them together at high energies.

We send two kinds of particles, protons and antiprotons, around the ring in opposite directions. At two points in the ring, we steer streams of these particles (called "beams") right into each other, and watch millions and millions of collisions, at the rate of almost two million each second.

 
Computer View of Proton-Antiproton Collision