1. IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of U
  1. Pennsylvania State University
    1. Doug Cowen
    2. nderstanding (MOU)
    3. Scope of Work
    4. Faculty:
    5. Scientists and Post Docs:
    6. Ph.D. Students:
    7. Computing Resources:

Last updated: September 3, 2014

 

Last updated: October 15, 2011



IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of U

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Pennsylvania State University


Doug Cowen

Ph.D Scientists (Faculty Scientist/Post Doc Grads):       4  (1 3 3)


nderstanding (MOU)


Scope of Work

 

Labor Cat.
Names
WBS L3
Tasks
Funds Source
WBS 2.1
WBS 2.2
WBS 2.3
WBS 2.4
WBS 2.5
Grand Total
         
Program Management
Detector Maintenance & Operations
Computing & Data Management
Triggering & Filtering
Data Quality, Reconstruction & Simulation Tools
 
KE COWEN, DOUG 
Education & Outreach
Education & Outreach Inst. In-Kind
0.05
       
0.05
   
Engineering and R&D
PINGU Co-Lead Inst. In-Kind
0.35
 
       
0.35
  COWEN, DOUG Total
 
 
0.40
       
0.40
PO ARLEN, TIM
 
Simulation Production
Simulation Production Base Grants    
0.08
   
0.08
   
Reconstruction/ Analysis tools
Develop analysis tools for systematics study Base Grants        
0.20
0.20
   
Detector Monitoring
Monitoring Shifts Base Grants  
0.03
     
0.03
   
Computing Resources
Coordination and Support Grid distributed computing NSF M&O Core    
0.23
   
0.23
  ARLEN, TIM Total
 
   
0.03
0.31
 
0.20
0.54
  JOAO PEDRO DE ANDRES
Computing Resources
Coordination and Support Grid distributed computing NSF M&O Core    
0.02
   
0.02
   
Simulation Production
Simulation Production, IceSim vetting for LowEn Base Grants    
0.01
   
0.01
   
Reconstruction/ Analysis tools
Low energy reconstruction techniques for DeepCore Base Grants        
0.01
0.01
DE ANDRES, JOAO PEDRO Total
 Moving to MSU 1 Nov 14
   
0.03
 
0.01
0.04
  KEIVANI,
AZADEH
Reconstruction/ Analysis tools
Integrate IceCube into AMON Inst. In-Kind    
0.25
   
0.25
KEIVANI, AZADEH Total
 
     
0.25
   
0.25
GR HUANG,
FEIFEI
Triggering & Filtering
Study PINGU/HEX hardware requirements using IceCube data & simulation Base Grants      
0.47
 
0.47
   
Detector Monitoring
Monitoring Shifts Base Grants  
0.03
     
0.03
HUANG, FEIFEI Total
 
   
0.03
 
0.47
 
0.50
PSU Total  
 
0.40
0.06
0.59
0.47
0.21
1.73
 

Summary:

Penn State contributions to the maintenance and operations of IceCube include:


Faculty:

Doug Cowen (L,+) - PINGU co-lead, outreach, 100% IceCube


Scientists and Post Docs:

Tim Arlen –  simprod, distributed computing, PINGU systematics studies, monitoring, 100% IceCube

 Analysis topics: Neutrino Mass Hierarchy, Neutrino Oscillations

João Pedro de Andres–

 simprod, distributed computing, Low-En triggering and filtering, Low-En reconstruction methods, 100% IceCube

 Reconstruction modules: MultiNest

 Analysis topics: Tau Neutrino Appearance

 Note: JP is moving to Michigan State 1 Nov 2014

Azadeh Keivani–  Integrating IceCube into AMON, 50% IceCube (on internal PSU funds, not PSU base grant)

 Analysis topics: n/a

 


Ph.D. Students:

Feifei Huang -  PINGU and HEX hardware requirements from IceCube data, 100% IceCube

 Thesis/Analysis topics:  n/a

Justin Lanfranchi - (still taking classes)

 Thesis/Analysis topics:  n/a

Daria Pankova -  (still taking classes)

 Thesis/Analysis topics:  n/a

 


Computing Resources:

The Penn State IceCube group has access to several large computing clusters maintained and administered by the Penn State High Performance Computing group, comprising a total of approximately 12,000 computing cores, including several GPUs. Since September 2014, the Penn State group has had priority access to about 200 cores, the purchased “share” of the cluster. However, our average utilization this past year has been in excess of 900 cores, with peak usage reaching over 3,000 cores. In total we used about 8 million CPU hours in the past year.

With these clusters Penn State has contributed substantially to simulation production, including the entire collaboration-wide simulation of low energy neutrinos with GENIE, PINGU simulations and reconstructions, and a significant fraction of simprod jobs run collaboration-wide. Substantial amounts of reconstruction development work have also been conducted using these resources.

Note: The activities and staffing levels in this MoU are appropriate for the period beginning October 1, 2014.  

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