Exploiting the Grid To Simulate & Design the LHCb Experiment

LHCb is a particle physics experiment which will study the subtle differences between matter and antimatter. The design and construction of the experiment is being undertaken by 500 scientists from 48 institutes in 14 countries around the world. The experiment will be located 100m underground at the Large Hadron Collider (27km circumference) which is being built at CERN in Geneva.

Over 1000 million short lived particles of matter and antimatter called B and B-bar mesons (which contain the b quark) will be studied at LHCb each year.

In order to design the detector and to understand the physics, many millions of simulated events also have to be produced.

We are using Grid technology so that we can use computing resources distributed around the world to satisfy our requirements.
 

A prototype system has been built which is based on our existing software. DataGrid middleware is being deployed as it become available

In this way, LHCb is able to  produce simulated datasets as well as feeding back our experience and ideas into the design of the Grid.

 

Computing centres on the Grid are gradually being added into the LHCb production system as they come online.

Currently, these include: CERN, FRANCE - IN2P3(Lyon), ITALY – Bologna, NETHERLANDS – NIKHEF, as well as the EU DataGrid Testbed.

In the UK, LHCb computing and software centres are sited at the Universities of Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Imperial College, Liverpool & Oxford and Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.

Submit jobs remotely via Web

 

Execute on Grid

 

Transfer data to mass store

 

Update bookkeeping database

 

Data quality check

 

To learn more about LHCb click here

To learn about GANGA - the joint ATLAS/LHCb Grid interface project click here

LHCb Logbook

GANGA Logbook

 

 

 

 


Last modified Mon 17 January 2005 .
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