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Transcript
Computing at the
Large Hadron Collider
in the CMS experiment
www.iphc.cnrs.fr/-cms-.html
Daniel Bloch
at the heart of matter
électron : < ~10-20 m
>10–9 m
10–10 m
< ~10–20 m
10–14 m
10–15 m
molecule
atom
nucleus
proton/neutron
quark
chemistry
particle physics
electromagnetic interaction
strong interaction
weak interaction
2
the standard model
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
Elaborated in years 1960-70
Describes both elementary particles (grouped in 3 families) and
electroweak (unifies em and weak int.) and strong interactions
Relies on symetry properties
(conservation laws)
Experimentally tested with great precision
(~10-3 for em and weak unification)
Higgs mecanism: to explain the origin
of particle masses
=> a new
particle:
Higgs boson:
discovered
at LHC
in 2012
3
beyond standard model: supersymetry ?
§ 
Supersymetry (Susy) is an
elegant theory which
considers matter and
interaction particles on an
equal footing:
§  many new Susy particles
are predicted,
but not their mass !
(+ many other parameters)
§  accessible at LHC ?
§ 
dark matter candidate
~
χ01
~χ0
3
~χ0
2
χ~0
~±
χ
4
Susy would solve some of our fundamental questions:
§  the Higgs boson has been found, but why is it so light ?
§  the lightest Susy particle (neutral, weakly interacting) would be an
excellent candidate for dark matter
§  electroweak and strong interactions can be unified in Susy models
§ 
But there are also known complications with Susy:
§ 
§ 
not found yet ! It would be ``natural’’ to get it at TeV mass scale
the minimal Susy model is (amost) ruled out => the number of free
parameters may be large (between > 5 and up to 124 …)
proton collisions at LHC
• 
• 
• 
• 
2800 bunches of protons
energy of each proton : 6.5 TeV
100 billions protons / bunch
beam crossing rate: 40 MHz
bunches
•  in the experiments at each
crossing:
~ 20-50 proton-proton collisions
~ 1500 particles produced
protons
•  1 billion interactions / second
constituents
(quarks, gluons)
•  impossible to record everything !
•  a Higgs boson to find
within 5 billions of
collisions…
5
proton collisions at LHC
• 
• 
• 
• 
2800 bunches of protons
energy of each proton : 6.5 TeV
100 billions protons / bunch
beam crossing rate: 40 MHz
bunches
•  In the experiments at each
crossing:
~ 20-50 proton-proton collisions
~ 1500 particules prodiuced
protons
•  1 billion interactions / second
constituents
(quarks, gluons)
•  A Higgs boson to find
within 5 billions of
collisions…
6
the CMS collaboration
•  38 countries
•  183 institutes
•  ~3000 scientists
(permanent,
post-doc, students)
•  ~100 French people
7
the CMS detector
as a 3D camera
of 14000 t, 29 m length, 15 m height
with 75 millions of pixels and taking
40 millions of pictures per second
8
the CMS detector
concentric layers, each with well defined
detection purpose
Tracker
magnetic field 3.8 T
reconstruct charged particles
pixels : 100×150 µm2
66M chanels, 1m2
Silicon strips :
9M chanels, 210 m2
9
the CMS detector
Calorimeter(s)
Measure the energy of particles
(except muons and neutrinos)
em. (ECAL) :
76k cristals PbWO4
hadronic (HCAL) :
scintillators/Cu
10
the CMS detector
Muon Detectors
11
what happens during collisions ?
12
trigger and data acquisition
1rst level trigger: 100 kHz
660 000 MB/s
from all sub-detectors
high level trigger: 1 kHz (100 ms / event)
600 MB/s
raw data
600
13
first data reconstruction at CERN
7
800
30
600
14
The World LHC Computing Grid
a worldwide net of many computing sites:
CERN CERN çè national centers çè academic centers
Tier 0
Tiear 1 : 12 sites
Tier 2 : 140 sites
15 the grid in France and at Strasbourg
CERN
Tier 0
çè
CC IN2P3
çè
Tier 1
CERN 8 sites
Tier 2
at IPHC Strasbourg:
•  Tier 2 for CMS and Alice
•  15% of ressources for other
local usage (subatomic
physics, protéomic, bioinformatics, …)
20M h of computing/year,
2000 slots,
1400 TB disk space
16 event size and reconstruction time
•  depends on the intensity of the beams:
•  superimposed interactions ~ 20 to 50
•  => affects the size of the events and their reconstruction time !
•  event size ~0.2 to 0.9 MB
•  reconstruction time per event ~15-80 s
•  need also to generate and simulate data: ~50 s / events
•  total number of events per year (real data + simulated): 5 Billions
17
CPU and disk needs
TIER 0
CMS
CPU
DISK
6k cores
15 PB (+35 PB tape)
25k cores
30 PB (+70 PB tape)
60k cores
30 PB
2015
TIER 1
CMS
2015
TIER 2
CMS
2015
18
event reconstruction
§ 
§ 
§ 
What we look for:
example of the production of a
Susy-top pair
experimental signature:
top-quark pair +MET
§ 
What we observe in the detector…
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
Information in calorimeters: ECAL,HCAL.
Trajectories of charged particles.
Muons (red line).
Missing Transverse Energy (MET: arrow).
χ0
χ0
event reconstruction (cont)
point of decay
of a jet from b quark
(accuracy ~100 µm)
•  Jets of particles with
the trajectograph and
calorimeters
•  Identification of jet
from b decay
(« b-tagging ») with
pixel detector: distance
of decay flight
pp collision
point
•  Missing Tranverse
Energy (MET) :
hermetic detectors =>
allows one to measure
the energy and
direction of invisible
particles (neutrino,
dark mater if any) in
the plane transverse to
the beam axis
20
event reconstruction (cont)
Reconstruction
of jets
Rejection of
events from
pile-up pp int.
Identification
of the event
Selection of jets
need to reject the large background
§ 
§ 
from different processes, but giving a similar signature
can be :
§  Physical background (irreductible), with same final state
§  Instrumental background: due to badly reconstructed particles
jet
jet
jet
jet
jet
§ 
need to define the sensitive variables to enhance the signal:
§  production rate (cross section).
§  invariant mass (or related quantities) of the initial particles
electron
+ MET
processing flow for a typical analysis
§  trigger: electron+jets or muon+jets or ee, eµ, µµ
rate ~200 Hz at 8 TeV (about 1/3 of all recorded events)
§  selection of the reconstructed events
and writing of reduced size information (Ttrees)
§  input, read on the Grid:
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
data: 500M events
simulation: Susy signal = 150M events, backgrounds = 150M events
overall size: 0.4 MB × 500M + 0.7 × 300M ~ 400 TB
processing time: 2 s / event
repeated 2-3 times after each new version of the data reconstruction
total: 1M hours of computing time
§  output, stored at IPHC on the Grid (can be used worldwide):
§  100M data events, 150M simulated events
§  overall size: 30 TB with full information, 5 TB with reduced information
§  processing time (fast) : 2.5 ms / event on local cluster
=> ~200 hours for all data and simulation
but repeated many times (~10)
search for the Susy-top
§  no Susy-top observed so far (at 8 TeV collision energy):
set limits on its mass and on dark matter particle
§  need to go higher in energy: 13 TeV collisions from this year