1. IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)
    2. Scope Of Work
    3. Scientists and Post Docs:
    4. Ph.D. Students:
    5. Diploma/Master Students:
    6. Explanation:
    7. Description of planned analysis:
    8. Description of Service work

Last updated: April 07, 2015

 



IceCube Institutional Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)


Scope Of Work

 

University of Alberta

Darren Grant

Ph.D Scientists (Faculty Scientist/Post Doc Grads) :       3  (2 1   2)

 

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
GRANT, DARREN and KOPPER, CLAUDIO Reconstruction/ Analysis tools Maintenance of IceCube-Photonics interface (D)        
0.10
0.10

      Icetray framework maintenance (C)        
0.05
0.05

      Maintenance of clsim direct photon propagation tool (C)        
0.10
0.10

    Simulation Production Simulation coordination board member (C)    
0.10
   
0.10

      GPU computing resources (C)    
0.10
   
0.10

    Administration PubComm Chair (D)
0.25
       
0.25

    Engineering and R&D support Co-convenor for PINGU (D)
0.35
       
0.35

      Lead in-ice high-energy extension (C)
0.35
       
0.35

    TFT Coordination TFT Board Member (D)      
0.10
 
0.10

      L2 manager (C)      
0.10
 
0.10

  GRANT, DARREN and KOPPER, CLAUDIO Total  
0.95
 
0.20
0.20
0.25
1.45

PO
RIEDEL, BENEDIKT Simulation Production Simulation production site manager at Compute Canada Resource Allocation    
0.40
   
0.40

  ALBERTA, PO Total      
0.40
   
0.40

GR
Nowicki, Sarah

Wood, Tania

Simulation Production
 
Reconstruction/ Analysis tools
Clsim photon table production
 
Calibrations with LED and minimum ionizing muons
   
0.35
 
 
 
 
0.35
 
0.35
 
 
0.35

  WOOD, TANIA and NOWICKI, SARAH Total      
0.35
 
0.35
0.70

ALBERTA Total
   
0.95
 
0.95
0.20
0.60
2.70

Faculty:

Darren Grant, Claudio Kopper

 


Scientists and Post Docs:

Benedict Riedel: Simulation production site manager at Compute Canada Resource Allocation


Ph.D. Students:

Tania Wood (PhD): Calibration working group (detector systematics with LEDs) (Analysis focus – low-energy atmospheric neutrino flux)

Sarah Nowicki (PhD): Simulation production – WestGrid computing; muon table production. (Analysis focus – neutrino oscillations with DeepCore)

 


Diploma/Master Students:

Undergraduates: 4 summer students.


Explanation:

A Canadian Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Discovery Subatomic Projects grant was just renewed for a 2 year period to support IceCube and IceCube-Gen2 activities at the University of Alberta and University of Toronto. The level of support is for 3 full-participant faculty (Clark, Grant, Kopper) and 3 associate faculty (Krauss, Moore, Pinfold). Also supported are Benedikt, plans for up to 4 PhD students (in this time) and 4 undergraduate students at the University of Alberta.


Description of planned analysis:

The Alberta group has focused thus far on analyses involving data from DeepCore and the development of the PINGU project. Tania’s PhD thesis is the measurement of the atmospheric neutrino flux at energies to ~10 GeV with DeepCore. Sarah is currently working on semi-infinite muon spline tables and simulation production on WestGrid and will complete her PhD thesis on a test of maximal theta_atm mixing with the 5-year DeepCore dataset. The undergraduates this summer have worked on the measurement of DOM efficiency with stopped muons, trigger efficiency studies of PINGU and a direct fitter with simulation. With the addition of Kopper as tenure-track faculty, this analysis program will grow significantly to include studies of high-energy neutrino searches and design studies for the high-energy detector extension. The group anticipates 2 postdoctoral fellows starting in the current fiscal year ending March 2015.


Description of Service work

Compute-Canada resources have been established as a primary simulation production resource for the IceCube collaboration. In 2014, a resource allocation valued at $980k from Compute-Canada was awarded to support IceCube activities. In particular, this allocation provides guaranteed GPU and CPU resources for the collaboration. Our service activities are centred on the simulation production and reconstruction developments with these resources, and calibration efforts. In 2015, our resource allocation from Compute Canada for IceCube was doubled from the 2014 values.

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