1. IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)
    2. Scope Of Work
    3. Faculty:
    4. Scientists and Post Docs:
    5. Students:
    6. Explanation:
    7. Description of planned analysis:
    8. Description of Service work
    9. Other contributions
    10. Additional Note:

   Last updated: February 25, 2014



IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)


Scope Of Work

 

University of Toronto

Kenneth Clark

Ph.D Scientists (Faculty Scientist/Post Doc Grads) : 1 (1 0 0)

 

Labor Cat.
Names
WBS L3
Tasks
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
CLARK, KENNETH
Reconstruction/ Analysis tools
Development of low-energy reconstruction techniques
       
0.10
0.10
   
Simulation Production
SciNet computing
   
0.25
   
0.25
   
Simulation
GENIE maintenance
   
0.10
   
0.10
                   
                   
                   
CLARK, KENNETH Total
     
0.35
 
0.10
0.45
TorontoTotal
         
0.35
 
0.10
0.45
 


Faculty:

Kenneth Clark


Scientists and Post Docs:

N/A


Students:

Graduate: 1 Undergraduate: 1 (expected 2014/15 fiscal year)


Explanation:

  Canadian IceCube activites are supported via a Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Subatomic Projects Discovery Grant. The most recent request was awarded beginning April 1 2013, for 1 year, to support the established IceCube program and the formation of an IceCube institute group at the University of Toronto. The envisaged group at Toronto in the 2014/15 fiscal year includes PI Clark, 1 graduate and 1 undergraduate researcher. The expectation is this group will include 1-2 graduate students and 2 undergraduate researchers in the 2015/16 fiscal year focused on Clark’s established program of low-energy IceCube physics (see below).

 


Description of planned analysis:

  The Toronto group will focus on analyses involving data low-energy IceCube events, including DeepCore neutrino oscillations, low mass WIMP studies and the PINGU detector development. We will build on our expertise in reconstruction algorithm development (energy and angular) as well as particle ID. The continuation of the in-depth likelihood-based analysis will lead to a long term goal of the determination of the neutrino mass hierarchy with PINGU.


Description of Service work

The primary service work will be related to the starting of simulation on the SciNet cluster. Specifically these contributions include the coordination and administration of the production of the low energy simulations. The choice has been made to use GENIE for all low-energy simulations, the upkeep of which will be the responsibility of the University of Toronto. Simulations in this energy range are of vital importance to the DeepCore oscillation and WIMP analyses.


Other contributions

The University of Toronto is a major participant in the Compute Ontario (SciNet) initiative, a part of Compute Canada that funds the WestGrid clusters. Some O(35k) CPUs are a part of the SciNet systems and a new GPU cluster is in development. The Toronto group will establish SciNet as an IceCube collaboration resource for simulation production, just has been done for WestGrid.


Additional Note:

As a full IceCube institute, in conjunction with Alberta, the Toronto group has been capable of leveraging dedicated priority on these clusters in the next Compute Canada grant (Fall 2013). Further, the Canadian groups have submitted the next NSERC request (October 2013 for fiscal year 2014/15) and the CFI PINGU requests (March 2014). Recognized standing of the Toronto group within the collaboration has been essential for the success of these funding proposals.

 

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