Title: CERN and the Information Technology Society
1CERN and the Information Technology Society
- By Bob Jones
- EGEE Technical Director
- CERN
- Geneva - Switzerland
2What is CERN?
- CERN is the European Organization for Nuclear
Research - The world's largest particle physics laboratory
- explores what matter is made of, and what forces
hold it together - Founded in 1954 (50 years this year!)
- Greece was one of the 12 founding members
- One of Europe's first truly international joint
ventures - Now includes 20 Member States
- ... where the web was born!
www.cern.ch
3Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
- CERN is building the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
the most powerful instrument ever built to
investigate elementary particles - With its 27 km circumference, the accelerator
will be the largest superconducting installation
in the world
4Challenges for LHC
- The computational requirements of the experiments
that will use the LHC are enormous - 12-14 PetaBytes (1015 bytes) of data will be
generated each year, the equivalent of more than
20 million CDs - LHC data analysis requires a computing power
equivalent to 100,000 of today's fastest PC
processors! - Data and results must be available to thousands
of physicists around the world
ATLAS
CMS
LHCb
5eScience
Such data and compute intensive sciences are next
generation applications that have extreme needs
but are likely to become mainstream in the next 5
years
- Physics/Astronomy (data from different kinds of
research instruments) - Medical/Healthcare (imaging, diagnosis and
treatment ) - Bioinformatics (study of the human genome and
proteome to understand genetic diseases) - Nanotechnology (design of new materials from the
molecular scale) - Engineering (design optimization, simulation,
failure analysis and remote Instrument access and
control) - Natural Resources and the Environment (weather
forecasting, earth observation, modeling and
prediction of complex systems river floods and
earthquake simulation)
6Grids - a new computing paradigm
- Access to a world-wide virtual computing
laboratory with almost infinite resources - Possibility to organize distributed scientific
communities in Virtual Organisations - Transparent access to distributed data and easy
workload management - Easy to use application interfaces
7How does the grid work?
- The Grid relies on advanced software, called
middleware, which ensures seamless communication
between different computers and different parts
of the world - The Grid search engine not only finds the data
the scientist needs, but also the data processing
techniques and the computing power to carry them
out - It distributes the computing task to wherever in
the world there is available capacity, and sends
the result back to the scientist
8What is the EGEE project?
- Build a large-scale production grid service to
- Support science and technology worldwide
- Link with and build on national, regional and
international initiatives - Foster international cooperation both in the
creation and the use of the e-infrastructure
9EGEE organisation
- 70 leading institutions in 27 countries,
federated in regional Grids - 32 M Euros EU funding (2004-5), O(100 M) total
budget for first 2 years starting 1st April 2004 - Aiming for a combined capacity of over 20000
CPUs (one of the largest international Grid
infrastructures ever assembled) - 300 dedicated staff
South-East Europe federation is lead by GRNET
(Greece) NCSR Demokritos is contributing to the
project and brings expertise from the CrossGrid
project
10EGEE Activities
- Emphasis on operating a production grid and
supporting the end-users - 48 service activities (Grid Operations, Support
and Management, Network Resource Provision) - 24 middleware re-engineering (Quality
Assurance, Security, Network Services
Development) - 28 networking (Management, Dissemination and
Outreach, User Training and Education,
Application Identification and Support, Policy
and International Cooperation)
11EGEE today service
- A production grid service originally established
by the LHC Computing Grid (LCG) project that now
links 8000 CPUs from 80 sites in more than 25
countries and continues to grow - Extension to the Balkans via the SEE-GRID project
lead by GRNET (Greece)
HellasGrid brings together Greek organisations
(including Demokritos) to form a Regional
Operations Centre
12EGEE today applications
- Supports many applications from physics, biology,
geophysics (industry), computational chemistry,
astro-particle physics with interest from
astrophysics, hydrology, seismology, grid search
engines, stock market simulators, digital video
etc.
13EGEE today training
- 600 people already trained at 40
courses/presentations around the world and many
more planned - 80 sets of training material and courses
available online from introductory to advanced
level - A general purpose portal for users (GENIUS) and
testbed to host tutorials (GILDA)
14EGEE today dissemination
- 1st project conference
- Over 300 delegates came to the 4 day kick-off
event during April in Cork Ireland - 2nd project conference
- 380 people came together during 22-26 November in
The Hague - 3rd project conference scheduled
- Scheduled in Athens on 18-22 April05
- Websites, Brochures and press releases
- For project and general public
- Information packs for the general public, press
and industry
www.eu-egee.org
15A look to the Future
- We have a window of opportunity to move grids
from research to production, as networks did a
few years ago - Success will lead to the adoption of grid
technology as the main computing infrastructure
for science - The next 2 years of EGEE will be critical in
establishing the first generation of production
grids - If we succeed then the potential return to
international scientific communities will be
enormous and open the path for commercial and
industrial applications
16Further information
- EGEE project www.eu-egee.org
- LCG Project lcg.web.cern.ch/LCG
- SEE-Grid Project www.see-grid.org
- The Grid Café - www.gridcafe.org
- CERN www.cern.ch