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Computing for the DUNE Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment

Computing for the DUNE Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment

Wednesday, November 4, 2020 at 4:00 pm
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Prof. Heidi Schellman (OSU Physics)

The DUNE long baseline neutrino oscillation collaboration consists of over 200 institutions from 34 countries. The experiment will consist of 4 10kT fiducial volume liquid argon TPC’s in South Dakota and a multi-system near detector at Fermilab. The far site in the Sanford Underground Laboratory is in preparation now with commissioning of the first 10kT fiducial volume Liquid Argon TPC expected over the period 2025-2028 and a long data taking run with 4 modules expected from 2029 and beyond.

An active prototyping program is already in place with a short test beam run with a 700T, 15,360 channel prototype of single-phase readout at the neutrino platform at CERN in late 2018 and tests of a similar sized dual-phase detector scheduled for mid-2019. The 2018 test beam run was a valuable live test of our computing model. The detector produced raw data at rates of up to ~2GB/s. These data were stored at full rate on tape at CERN and Fermilab and replicated at sites in the UK and Czech Republic. In total 1.8 PB of raw data were produced and reconstructed during the six week test beam run.

Baseline predictions for the full DUNE detector data, starting in the mid 2020’s are 30-60 PB of raw data per year. In contrast to traditional HEP computational problems, DUNE’s Liquid Argon TPC data consist of simple but very large (many GB) 2D data objects which share many characteristics with astrophysical images. This presents opportunities to use advances in machine learning and pattern recognition as a frontier user of High Performance Computing facilities capable of massively parallel processing.

Prof. Heidi Schellman is an experimental particle physicist and an expert in neutrino physics. She is Professor and Head of Physics at Oregon State University. She earned a B.S. in mathematics in 1977 from Stanford University and an M.S. and Ph.D. in physics in 1984 from the University of California, Berkeley.

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