[1] Both the DAΦNE collider and the KLOE detector were named after the two titular characters of the ancient Greek play Daphnis and Chloe, written in the second century AD.
[2] In the story, the two grow up and fall in love, experiencing various hardships before living happily ever after.
The DAΦNE collider was designed with the KLOE experiment as its primary goal, leading to the two to be named as a pair.
[5] The computer interpreting its data was able to calculate reconstructed particle trajectories with a precision of within 0.3%.
Its first run, Run-I was begun in November 2014 and continued until July 2015, observing a total of 1 billion neutral kaon decays.