Abstract
Gas based detector R&D relies heavily on full simulation of detectors and their optimization before final prototypes can be built and tested. These simulations in particular those with complex scenarios such as those involving high detector voltages or gas with larger gains are computationally intensive may take several days or weeks to complete. These long-running simulations usually run on the high-performance computers in batch mode. If the results lead to unexpected behavior, then the simulation might be rerun with different parameters. However, the simulations (or jobs) may have to wait in a queue until they get a chance to run again because the supercomputer is a shared resource that maintains a queue of other user programs as well and executes them as time and priorities permit. It may result in inefficient resource utilization and increase in the turnaround time for the scientific experiment. To overcome this issue, the monitoring of the behavior of a simulation, while it is running (or live), is essential. In this work, we employ the computational steering technique by coupling the detector simulations with a visualization package named VisIt to enable the exploration of the live data as it is produced by the simulation.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 072033 |
Journal | Journal of Physics: Conference Series |
Volume | 898 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 23 Nov 2017 |
Externally published | Yes |
Event | 22nd International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics, CHEP 2016 - San Francisco, United States Duration: 10 Oct 2016 → 14 Oct 2016 |