Abstract
One of the most fundamental mysteries about our universe is the
question where all the matter came from. If matter and anti-matter
behaved in the same way, they should have been created in equal
amounts during the big bang and subsequently annihilated, leaving
nothing but a sea of photons.
The Tokai To Kamioka (T2K) experiment in Japan uses neutrino and
anti-neutrino beams to investigate the possible difference between
matter and anti-matter. As the first experiment ever, it was able
to exclude large parts of the parameter space at the 3-sigma
confidence level. The result suggests that the matter-antimatter
asymmetry is (close to) as large as it can be in the leptonic
sector. This provides an important input to the study of processes
of leptogenesis, i.e the creation of a matter excess via
asymmetries in the leptonic sector.
In this talk I will present a brief introduction to the T2K
experiment and present these newest results.