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September 27th, 2016 Challenges Posed by Processing Scientific Data at Extreme Light Infrastructures Tamás Gaizer.

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Presentation on theme: "September 27th, 2016 Challenges Posed by Processing Scientific Data at Extreme Light Infrastructures Tamás Gaizer."— Presentation transcript:

1 September 27th, 2016 Challenges Posed by Processing Scientific Data at Extreme Light Infrastructures Tamás Gaizer

2 ELI = Extreme Light Infrastructure: pan-European research institution Three pillars (cutting edge research institutions): ELI-ALPS (Szeged, Hungary): ELI-BL (Dolní Břežany, Czech Republic): PW-power laser with high repetition rate ELI-NP (Măgurele, Romania): Ultrahigh intensity laser beam Transition from construction to operation: All pillars are close to completion Operation is expected to start in 2017 - 2018 In Szeged, 10 endpoints („SeSo”) will be available for experiments Construction is run independently at the three pillars, coordinated by ELI-DC ELITRANS: transformation from ERDF - funded distributed implementation towards ERIC - governed unified operation ELI in a Nutshell

3 initiation Parallel implementation joint operation MoU ELI Delivery Consortium ELI-ERICPP 20082011 20132017 ELITRANS H2020 Project on the ELI roadmap Transition from distributed implementations towards integrated and unified operation ELITrans

4 Developing concepts for ELI-ERIC’s business model: essential elements of the future ELI-ERIC’s organisation, legal constitution, financial sustainability, governance, user relations, and international integration Preparing ELI-ERIC’s “business plan”, adapted to the operation as the world’s first international laser user facility corporate-wide concepts for a VRME, definition and standardisation of user-facility interfaces, health and safety regulations, specialized experiment preparation techniques, computing and big-data management, innovation and technology transfer aspects Preparing and undertaking the merger of formally independent national construction projects towards one unified research infrastructure of pan-European importance. This includes steps towards the transformation and unification of ELI’s internal structures and organisational procedures, the creation of an internal corporate identity, harmonisation and unification of international relations, creation of a common scientific profile and competitive user research opportunities. Main ELITRANS objectives

5 Key objectives: Developing concepts for ELI-ERIC’s business model Preparing ELI-ERIC’s “business plan” Manage the merger of independent developments into one unified RI Timescale, budget: September 2015 – August 2018 (36 months) 11 workpackages, one devoted to „Data and computing” EC funding of 3.4 mEUR Consortium members: Coordinator: Extreme Light Delivery Consortium ASBL Pillars: ELI-ALPS, ELI-BL, ELI-NP E-infrastructures specialised on big data handling: PRACE, KIT, EGI Strategic partners: DESY, STFC, Elettra ELITRANS Facts and Figures

6 Global View of ELI Research Process The model is partially based on: J. Bicarregui: Building an Open Data Infrastructure for Science: Turning Policy into Practice. Franco-British Workshop on Big Data in Science, November 2012

7 Goal of Data and Computing: Prepare the implementation of a common, ELI-wide data management service layer Define interfaces, integrate to e-infrastructure, manage big data, provide unified access to users, recommend data models, conduct pilot projects Challenges: State-of-the art research tools open new perspective for acquiring raw data -> quantity and complexity increases Exact needs are being assessed now / making predictions is challenging Expected quantity: 1 – 5 PB scientific data / year / pillar Different endpoints require different acquisition, management and computation tools and technologies Need for online processing (during the experiment) Data and Computing WP: Goal and Challenges

8 Tasks within Data and Computing WP: Task 1: Develop common concepts for data management, identify requirements Task 2: Survey and identify e-infrastructure solutions Task 3: Define the common ELI-wide data management service layer How to Achieve

9 Envisaged User Scenarios (1): Generic Data Management Workflow

10 Would-be users: scientists researchers from the field of physics, chemistry, biology, nanotechnology General public: data might be made available some time after the experiment Expected number of users: 500-1000 / year Access to the system: on-site during the experiment, remote access in certain cases „System”: different systems for different endpoints! Needs are changing from „traditional” scientific computation to HPC Envisaged User Scenarios (2)

11 Every pillar is under development yet Step-by-step installation of experiment endpoints during 2017 First „friendly user test” are expected to start in 2017 Live operation: during 2018 Components related to data and computing: still in the design phase. Equipment supporting the DAQ process definitely will be kept in-house „Offline” processing, mid- and long term storage might be implemented at pillar, ERIC, or e-infrastructure Current Status

12 A unified, ELI-wide data management framework will be applied at every pillar Controlled data management processes, transparent service rules Experimental data and related metadata will be maintained according to international standards Access to a wide range of state-of-the-art data management and computation tools Availability of e-infrastructure solutions to support processing and curation of scientific data Closing Remarks: Benefits for Scientific Community

13 THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!


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