computing at the high energy physics lab at fit

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Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT Patrick Ford, Jen Helsby, Richard Hoch, David Pena Dr. Hohlmann, Dr. Mitra

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Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT. Patrick Ford, Jen Helsby, Richard Hoch, David Pena Dr. Hohlmann, Dr. Mitra. Current Projects. Cluster Computing - HEP’s computer cluster Grid Computing - Getting the cluster on the Open Science Grid Simulations of Particles Through Matter - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Patrick Ford, Jen Helsby, Richard Hoch, David Pena

Dr. Hohlmann, Dr. Mitra

Page 2: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Current Projects• Cluster Computing - HEP’s computer cluster

• Grid Computing - Getting the cluster on the Open Science Grid

• Simulations of Particles Through Matter - Using Geant4 to model cosmic ray muons traveling through

different mediums

• Reconstruction Algorithms - Developing algorithms to reconstruct muons passage through

matter

Page 3: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Cluster Computing• Popular high performance computing solution.• A computer cluster is a group of tightly coupled

computers that work together closely so that in many respects they can be viewed as though they are a single computer.

• Computing clusters make up over half of the top 500 most powerful computers in the world

System X at Virginia Tech (12.5 Teraflops)

[1]

Page 4: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

HEP Computer Cluster

• Equipment loaned by University of Florida

• Started with 10 Dual CPU Intel Pentium 1.0 GHz servers

• One server for front-end, nine for nodes

• Uses networked attached storage (NAS)

• Cascaded switches for expandability and redundancy

Page 5: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Cluster Topology

Page 6: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Current and Future Status• Currently the original front-end is still being used,

but the cluster has expanded to 30 nodes• Uses a high-end managed switch as the hub of

network and cascades to unmanaged switches with 10 nodes each

• Future expansion will include high-end compute nodes, a ~10TB NAS, and a better front-end

MAGNUM XV3045 NAS

[2]

Page 7: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

HEP COMPUTER CLUSTER

Newest Nodes NAS 1 and 2

Page 8: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Rocks

• Open-source Linux cluster distribution

• Enables end users to easily build computational clusters

[3]

Page 9: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Rocks Kickstart Graph

Page 10: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Networked Attached Storage

• Also uses Rocks

• Uses RAID 5

- Faster writing. Each hard drive needs to write only 1/3 of the data

- Efficiency increases as number of hard drives increases

- Fault tolerance. If any one hard drive fails, the data on that drive can be reconstructed using the data from the other two drives.

Page 11: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Condor

• Software that enables us to distribute the load of a computing task over all the CPUs in the cluster

• This type of software is called a batch job system

• Well suited for grid computing, as it is able to submit jobs to machines located all over the world

Page 12: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Grid Computing

• A collection of networks, software, and computers intended for shared use by organizations of people

• Resources are managed by a grid • Users run applications as needed without worrying

about where the computers are • Well-suited to organizations that consist of a large

number of geographically distributed members, all working on a common project, and who require shared computing resources in order to accomplish their work

Page 13: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Grid LayersI. Network layer - Underlying connectivity

II. The grid's resources - data storage, databases, software repositories, and even sensors III. The middleware, or "brains" of the grid - does all the work to connect users' jobs to computing resources IV. Application layer - diverse layer, as it includes virtually any program an end user

wishes to run

Page 14: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Open Science Grid

• A distributed computing infrastructure that is used for large-scale scientific work

• Used by many universities, laboratories, and software developers

• Backed by the NSF and the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science

• The OSG Consortium builds and operates the OSG project, with the goal of giving scientists from many fields access to shared resources worldwide

Page 15: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Science on OSG• Scientists from many fields use OSG: particle and

nuclear physics, astrophysics, bioinformatics, gravitational-wave science and computer science collaborations

[4]

Page 16: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Getting On OSG

• Need the third layer, the middleware• OSG’s is based on the Virtual Data Toolkit

(VDT)• Installation package is needed, called

Pacman• First installed Integration Test Bed (ITB)

client and then the Compute Element (CE) package

Page 17: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Getting On OSG (cont.)

• Interfacing Globus and Condor

• Installing additional packages: Managed Fork , MonaLisa, other monitoring services

• Getting personal and host certificates, and the Certificate Authority (CA) list

• Testing and debugging the install

• Registering with OSG

Page 18: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Success… partially

The Integration Test Bed Map

Page 19: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Particle Simulations

• Geant4 provides a toolkit that enables modeling of many different particles through matter

• Much data can be extracted from these simulations

• Our focus is on the simulation of cosmic ray muons traveling through different mediums. Why?

Page 20: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Muon Tomograpy

• Outgrowth of muon and proton radiography

• Provides a new way to detect threats such as nuclear weapons or fissionable material, and other terrorist threats (artillery shells, IED’s, etc.)

• Why muons?

Page 21: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Why Muons?• Relatively large elementary particles and travel at

relativistic speeds, can penetrate tens of meters into rocks and other matter before attenuating as a result of absorption or deflection by other atoms

• All natural occurring muons on Earth are due to cosmic rays

• One per cm^2 per minute• Muons are deflected by coulomb scattering, dependent on

the atomic number of the material• Benefits over other techniques

Muons more penetrating than gamma raysNo extra radiation doseFewer false alarms

[5]

Page 22: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

How Does It Work?

Page 23: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Geant4• Free tool that can run on Windows, Linux,

and MAC OS X

• Current version written in C++; former versions written in Fortran

• Developed and maintained by the Geant4 collaboration which has over 100 members worldwide

[6]

Page 24: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Scope of Geant4

• the geometry of the system (e.g. a box)• the materials involved (e.g. Pb, U, etc.)• the fundamental particles of interest (e.g. electrons,

muons, etc.)• the physics processes governing particle interactions• the generation of event data• the storage of events and tracks• the visualization of the detector and particle

trajectories• the capture and analysis of simulation data at different

levels of detail and refinement

Page 25: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

First Scenario• Created a 50x50x50 cm^3 lead block in an argon

atmosphere• Bombarded it with 3GeV muons• Interactions included: muons, electrons - ionization, knock-on electrons,

multiple scattering photons – absorption via photoelectric effect, Compton

scattering, pair production

Page 26: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT
Page 27: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Second Scenario• Interfaced Cosmic RaY

(CRY) to simulate cosmic ray muon

• Used same lead box as material to detect, but added detectors made of G10 Material

Blue – Positively Charged Muons

Red – Negatively Charged Muons

Green - Photons

Page 28: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Future Scenarios

• Adding more detectors• Simulating a truck carrying plywood• Hidden in the cargo area, and in the engine block

are small blocks of uranium• Problems:

- Small amounts of high-z material harder to detect

- Engine block contains high-z material so multiple scattering will occur

Page 29: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Reconstruction Algorithms

• Produces a 3D image from the projection

• For Muon Tomography two have been prominently used:

- Point of Closest Approach

- Maximum Likelihood

• Implemented the POCA algorithm

Page 30: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Point of Closest Approach• Take two lines, L1 and L2• Take w(s,t) = L1(s) – L2(t)• L1 and L2 closest when w(s,t) is a minimum, and

this vector is perpendicular to these points, meaning w·v=0 and w·u=0

• Solve these by substituting w = L1(s)-L2(t) = w0 + su - tv, where w0 = P0-Q0 we get two linear equations:

• (u·u)s-(u·v)t=-u·w0 and (u·v)s-(v·v)t=-v·w0• If we set a = (u·u), b = (u·v), c = (v·v), d = u·w0 and

e = v·wo and then solve for s and t we get the equations:

• s = be-cd/(ac-b^2) and t = ae-bd/(ac-b^2)

Page 31: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Using POCA to find Scatter Points

Page 32: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

3D Imaging• Also have the scattering angle of the muon

• A large scattering angle indicates high Z-object

• When plotted, points will be assigned colors according to scattering angle

[7]

Page 33: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

Future Work

• Expanding the Cluster - High-end nodes, NAS, and front-end• Becoming a fully functional site on OSG• Modeling more detailed scenarios using

Geant4• Improving POCA, and implementing a

Maximum Likelihood algorithm• Using real world data

Page 34: Computing at the High Energy Physics Lab at FIT

References

1) http://www.vt.edu/spotlight/20060806_systemx.php2) http://www.cybertronpc.com/3) http://www.rocksclusters.org/wordpress/4) http://www.opensciencegrid.org/Science_on_the_O

SG/Currently_Running_Applications5) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muons6) http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/7) http://math.lanl.gov/Research/Publications/Docs/bo

rozdin-2004-information.pdf