The ATLAS Data Carousel Project Status

18 May 2021, 15:13
13m
Short Talk Distributed Computing, Data Management and Facilities Storage

Speaker

Alexei Klimentov (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))

Description

The High Luminosity upgrade to the LHC, which aims for a ten-fold increase in the luminosity of proton-proton collisions at an energy of 14 TeV, is expected to start operation in 2028/29, and will deliver an unprecedented volume of scientific data at the multi-exabyte scale. This amount of data has to be stored and the corresponding storage system must ensure fast and reliable data delivery for processing by scientific groups distributed all over the world. The present LHC computing and data management model will not be able to provide the required infrastructure growth even taking into account the expected hardware technology evolution. To address this challenge, the Data Carousel R&D project was launched by the ATLAS experiment in the fall of 2018. State-of-the-art data and workflow management technologies are under active development, and their current status is presented here.

Primary authors

Martin Barisits (CERN) Misha Borodin (University of Iowa (US)) Alessandro Di Girolamo (CERN) Dmitry Golubkov (Institute for High Energy Physics of NRC Kurchatov Institute (R) Wen Guan (University of Wisconsin (US)) Johannes Elmsheuser (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)) Dr Edward Karavakis (CERN) Alexei Klimentov (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)) Tatiana Korchuganova (Universidad Andres Bello (CL)) Mario Lassnig (CERN) Fa-Hui Lin (University of Texas at Arlington (US)) Tadashi Maeno (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)) Siarhei Padolski (BNL) David Michael South (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)) Xin Zhao (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))

Presentation materials

Proceedings

Paper