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Large Scale Facilities and Centres of Excellence The CERN experience Luciano MAIANI. CERN.

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Presentation on theme: "Large Scale Facilities and Centres of Excellence The CERN experience Luciano MAIANI. CERN."— Presentation transcript:

1 Large Scale Facilities and Centres of Excellence The CERN experience Luciano MAIANI. CERN

2 European Laboratory for Particle Physics CERN Member States (2002) P, low energy Nuclear physics P, high energy P-P, very high energy Cold anti-P Observer States: EU Israel, Turkey Japan, Russia, USA

3 Strongly based in universities 20 members, ~270 institutes, ~4600 users Studentships, fellowships, etc. Annual throughput of ~400 engineers and ~500 physicists CERN’s network in Europe Large Hadron Collider :  a Global project with mostly (≈80%) Regional support  Community > 5000 physicists world-wide  2000 MEuro of high-tech orders over a decade - many placed by universities.

4 55 Others 10 70 27 22 12 4 4306 Registered CERN Users, July 2002 Member States Observer States 538 87 637 34 18 Total non-Member States: 1735

5

6 Age Distribution of CERN Users (July 2002)

7 Research based on excellence ACCESS TO EXPERIMENTS Excellence assessed by independent peer review WIDE GEOGRAPHY Research knows no borders, and “anyone from anywhere” can propose to conduct an experiment at CERN. The committees will look carefully at the merit of the proposal, and how it will be funded, but neither the passport not the home base are key factors. MULTIPLE FIELDS We don’t only need excellent theoretical and experimental particle physicists. We need excellent staff in multiple fields – accelerator construction, detector design, electronics, mechanical engineering, IT, etc.

8 Anti-Hydrogen Gymnastic and Detection Hot plasma Cold plasma

9 The Large Hadron Collider in the LEP Tunnel Proton- Proton Collider 7 TeV +7 TeV Luminosity = 10 34 cm -2 sec -1 first targets: Higgs boson (s) Supersymmetric Particles Quark-Gluon Plasma CP violation in B

10 Towards the origin

11

12 ATLAS and CMS Caverns

13 Barrel Toroid Integration Work @ CERN Coil Casing Integration 1 contracted to an outside Firm in 2000 for ~ 3.5 MCHF End 2001 the Firm stops preparation work with substantial financial claims Feb 2002 ATLAS negotiated a new solution with thesecond bidder + CEA Saclay + JINR + ATLAS team to do the work at CERN Work will start in bldg 180 mid May 2002. Original cost and schedule respected. Integration 1 Integration 2 Work contracted to the JINR group + CEA Saclay + ATLAS team in bldg 180. Tooling prepared, readiness on schedule Includes final functional test bladders prepag P(resin +  spheres) conductor pancake Al coil casing cryostat

14 The first ATLAS Barrel Toroid vacuum vessel arriving at CERN

15 CMS: Magnet Barrel Yoke finished

16 String 2: one complete LHC cell, 120 m Being operated now

17 Spreading the message and/or Involving the others

18 CERN beyond the Member States Several NMS countries help to construct the LHC – notably Canada, India, Japan, Russia and USA Many others participate in the LHC experiments CERN is arguably the largest lab in the world for both the Russian and US particle physics communities

19 Infrastructure - beyond the European Member States The win-win situation Excellent researchers are not limited to EU-15 countries, nor even to greater Europe People often very well-educated and highly motivated If we can find the right specialities, everyone can become a major winner Raw materials, heavy engineering, assembly of one-off sub-detectors, software components, are all things that can be spread around imaginatively….. We need to engage these researchers and their governments CMS feet from Pakistan LHC corrector magnet from India Russian warm dipoles

20 Access It is sometimes tempting to make access dependent on “membership”, but particle physics has tended to be able to use a different approach Experiments running on our “facilities” tend to be based on very large (50-2000 person) collaborations This allows people from economically weaker countries to join with those from stronger regions So we tend not to look at the passport of the people making proposals But (in general) we expect people who have not funded the lab infrastructure to contribute more than their “fair share” to the cost of the experiment The contribution can take many forms, such as assembly effort, software, … Look for the “win-win”.

21 Mobility Getting the new researchers to the infrastructure Getting the staff of the lab to the new nations Schools The Joint CERN- Dubna School

22 Integration Don’t erect, or, if they exist, tear down any administrative barriers Encourage these countries to send students Run summer schools in new countries Look for funding for all of this CERN has good experience with ISTC and INTAS - thanks to EU (among others) Also NATO and Soros play some important roles, especially for computer networking We have high hopes of EU support to engage researchers from, for example, Latin America, the Mediterranean basin, SE Europe, the Caucasus, and Asia

23 Computer Networking and Grids

24 Computer networking as basic research infrastructure You need up-to-date information to be a world-class researcher Today you (mainly) get that info mainly through your terminal (plus phone, video-meetings, and conferences) Surest way for weak countries to lose their best brains is to provide them poor connectivity Triple requirement - Campus, National Network, International Connectivity

25 CMS:1800 physicists 150 institutes 32 countries World Wide Collaboration  distributed computing & storage capacity

26 Grids Next step beyond the Web is the Grid A way for researchers to share their computing resources - including processing power, data and information CERN is very active here, with DataGrid, CrossGrid and DataTAG Plus strong national efforts in several countries - USA has Globus, GriPhyN and PPDG, UK has GridPP and major e-Science efforts. Also F, I, NL, ….

27 Processor farms : the 90's supercomputer

28 Tools: Fabrics and Networks Needed for LHC at CERN in 2006: Storage Raw recording rate 0.1 – 1 GBytes/sec Accumulating at 5-8 PetaBytes/year 10 PetaBytes of disk Processing 200’000 of today’s fastest PCs Networks 5-10 Gbps between main Grid nodes

29 CERN openlab concept –Create synergies between basic research and industry –Research provides challenge, industry provides advanced items, concepts into collaborative forum –Participation fee Create a Collaborative Forum between public sector and industries: to solve a well defined problem through open integration of technologies, aiming at open standards Hewlett Packard

30 iVDGL INFN Grid CrossGrid DataTAG And many more; Several M$ or M€ each, HEP and other Sciences, Aggressive test and development phase now, HEP Intergrid Coordination Board: Coordinated test programme Interoperability Avoid duplication of efforts Common standards

31 CERN and EU programmes

32 Active “projects” 14 running projects –6 networks and grids- 3 Isolde –2 PS- nTOF (Euratom part of FP6) –Outreach (CBWI)- 1 “other” (ESTA) Support for schools (CAS and CSP) Support for two (human) networks Individual Marie Curie fellows 21 running INTAS projects (MS) ~20 running ISTC projects (NK)

33 Fellowships Marie Curie Fellows –Successfully hosted many individual MCF who applied to work at CERN –In FP5 CERN was not eligible as a Host (not Industry, not in a “poor” region, not a Ph.D. granting institute) –In FP6 we believe that we will be eligible as a Host and we intend to apply

34 Gas Electron Multiplier The Gas Electron Multiplier consists of a thin polymer foil, metal-clad on both sides, and pierced by a high density of holes (typically 70 µm in diameter at 140 µm pitch). On application of a potential difference between the two sides, electrons from a drift region are collected into the holes, multiply in avalanche and emerge on the lower region X-ray absorption radiography of a bat, recorded with a GEM detector. The insert shows the details of the bat’s claw (picture size nine by eleven millimetres).

35 Marie Curie, 1926 "If this importance (of Science) has been cast sometime into doubts, it is because the efforts of mankind toward its most beautiful aspirations have been imperfect… Above all, it is by this daily effort toward more science that mankind has reached the exceptional place that she occupies on Earth. We must belong to those who.... believe, invincibly, that science will triumph over ignorance and war."


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