| Jérôme Lauret, left, and Kate Keahey, right. Images courtesy of J.Lauret and ANL, respectively. |
With local computers busy and the grid unable to guarantee workable resources on very short notice, the STAR experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory turned to cloud computing to meet a tough deadline. Only two weeks before the biggest conference in the field, the team started a set of complex simulations and finished in time to present results.
“This is the very first time cloud computing has been used in our field for scientific production work with full confidence in the results” said Jérôme Lauret, who heads the STAR team. “This is a breakthrough.”
STAR studies fundamental properties of nuclear matter as it exists in a high-density state called a Quark Gluon Plasma. This plasma decays into elementary particles, emitting narrow streams of fast-moving particles called jets. Scientists infer information from the jets about the conditions and properties of this plasma.
The STAR team had recently succeeded in reconstructing jets in the collisions of gold nuclei. Achieving and verifying this result required analysis of large data samples and simulations, and other compute-intensive tasks. STAR resources running the Open Science Grid software provided for much of this computation. However, behind the two-week, pre-conference scramble stands a collaboration begun a few years ago between STAR and the Nimbus team at Argonne National Laboratory, led by Kate Keahey.
Nimbus provides cloud computing tools that include the Nimbus Workspace Service, an open source implementation of Amazon’s EC2, as well as the Nimbus Context Broker, which enables scientists to turn deployed virtual machine (VM) images into “turnkey” virtual clusters. A VM image is effectively a fully-configured computer environment — everything but the hardware. . |