CP violation is a well-established phenomenon in particle physics, but
until 2001 it was only observed in kaons. In the last decade, several
matter-antimatter asymmetries have been observed in neutral B mesons in
line with the expectations of the Standard Model of the weak
interaction. Direct CP violation is also expected in the decay rates
of charged B+ mesons versus that of B- mesons, though the greatest
effects are present in a decay that occurs just twice in 10 million
decays. Such rarity requires huge samples to study and this is exactly
what the LHC, and its dedicated *B-*physics experiment LHCb provide.
This thesis presents an analysis of the first two years of LHCb data.
The author describes the first observation of the rare decay, B- → DK-,
D → π-K+ and the first observation of direct CP violation in this B
decay. The work constitutes essential information on the experiment's
measurement of a fundamental parameter of the theory and stands as a
benchmark against which subsequent analyses of this type will be
compared.