Abstract

ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is a detector dedicated to the studies with heavy ion collisions exploring the physics of strongly interacting nuclear matter and the quark-gluon plasma at the CERN LHC (Large Hadron Collider). After the second long shutdown of the LHC, the ALICE Experiment will be upgraded to make high precision measurements of rare probes at low pT, which cannot be selected with a trigger, and therefore require a very large sample of events recorded on tape. The online computing system will be completely redesigned to address the major challenge of sampling the full 50 kHz Pb-Pb interaction rate increasing the present limit by a factor of 100. This upgrade will also include the continuous un-triggered read-out of two detectors: ITS (Inner Tracking System) and TPC (Time Projection Chamber)) producing a sustained throughput of 1 TB/s. This unprecedented data rate will be reduced by adopting an entirely new strategy where calibration and reconstruction are performed online, and only the reconstruction results are stored while the raw data are discarded. This system, already demonstrated in production on the TPC data since 2011, will be optimized for the online usage of reconstruction algorithms. This implies much tighter coupling between online and offline computing systems. An R&D program has been set up to meet this huge challenge. The object of this paper is to present this program and its first results.

Highlights

  • Home Search Collections Journals About Contact us My IOPscienceO2: A novel combined online and offline computing system for the ALICE Experiment after 2018

  • The ALICE Experiment [1] has been taking data since the LHC first beam in 2008

  • The Time Projection Chamber (TPC) will be upgraded with replacement of the chambers by Gas Electron Multipliers (GEMs) and a new pipelined readout electronics based on a continuous read-out scheme[6]

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Summary

Home Search Collections Journals About Contact us My IOPscience

O2: A novel combined online and offline computing system for the ALICE Experiment after 2018. This content has been downloaded from IOPscience. You may be interested in: Preparing the ALICE DAQ upgrade F Carena, W Carena, S Chapeland et al System performance monitoring of the ALICE Data Acquisition System with Zabbix A Telesca, F Carena, W Carena et al The ALICE DAQ, current status and future evolution F Carena, W Carena, S Chapeland et al The ALICE data quality monitoring B von Haller, F Roukoutakis, S Chapeland et al ALICE moves into warp drive F Carena, W Carena, S Chapeland et al Data compression in ALICE by on-line track reconstruction and space point analysis Matthias Richter The ALICE online data storage system R Divià, U Fuchs, I Makhlyueva et al.20th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP2013) IOP Publishing.

Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
Introduction
After zero After data suppression compression
Software framework
Large software framework
Conclusion
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