The World's Fastest Image Processor 156
Roland Piquepaille writes "This image processor is not your typical digital camera. It took 6 years, 20 people, and $6 million to build the 'Regional Calorimeter Trigger' (RCT) which will be a component of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment, one of the detectors on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland. The RCT will fill several racks of space in order to process 4 trillion bits of information per second while analyzing a billion proton collisions per second. The camera is currently being tested at the University of Wisconsin at Madison before being shipped to Geneva in June to participate in the first experiments in 2007."
okay, so it takes great pictures! (Score:4, Funny)
What about the call quality?, and text-messaging? And what is the area coverage? What kinds of plans are available?
Does it play mp3s?
Can I take videos with it and send to my friends?
Re:okay, so it takes great pictures! (Score:1, Funny)
Does it play mp3s?
If it doesn't play Ogg Vorbis, I don't want it!
WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
"all that energy is compressed into two protons, which are a million times smaller than that annoying bug[Mosquito].
Hmm, (2/(6.02*10^23grams))/(0.002grams) = 1.66112957 × 10-21 so 2 protons weigh about 1 / (1,700,000,000,000,000,000,000)th as much as those Mosquito's which means it's volume is around that much smaller as well.
How about length 15 mm vs (10^15 meters) = 1.5 × 10^ -17meters so umm nope.
Re:WTF? (Score:1)
Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)
A mosquito with nuclear density would be a heavy bug indeed. And yes, IAAPhysicist.
Don't forget the "anti-red-eye" feature! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't forget the "anti-red-eye" feature! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't forget the "anti-red-eye" feature! (Score:2)
Yeah, as soon as I hit I had the thought that there were probably plenty of people who'd prefer their photo subjects to have glowing red (or green, etc.) eyes... though the only ones that come to mind immediately are the Weekly World News [weeklyworldnews.com].
Re:okay, so it takes great pictures! (Score:2, Interesting)
nairb774
The Whoda Whata (Score:5, Funny)
I still have no idea what a RCT, CMS, or LHC really are and I RTFA.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:5, Informative)
IANAPhysicist, but I work in proximity to them. So I know a little bit about this stuff.
RCT = A device that detects a particle after a collision happens in a particle accelerator, which "triggers" to the connected computer that something interesting happened.
CMS = Name of the experiment [cmsinfo.cern.ch]. Like NASA is the name of an organization.
LHC = A big particle collider being built at CERN [web.cern.ch], in Switzerland. Like Fermilab, but bigger.
Physicists are smart folk, but are hideous at PR. Most of the web pages intended to be a PR front fail miserably, and are indecipherable to anyone except physicists. There was even a movement a few years back to get physicsts to name their experiments in more public-friendly ways, which failed miserably.
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:4, Interesting)
I did my experimental particle physics PhD on an experiment named BaBar [stanford.edu], you know, like the elephant. Are you telling me that isn't public-friendly?
A similar experiment based in Japan is called Belle [belle.kek.jp] and one in upstate NY called CLEO [cornell.edu]. One of the other experiments at the LHC is called ATLAS [atlas.ch]. They all seem reasonably public-friendly names (but then I am one of the folks you are saying don't know what a public-freindly name is, so I suppose my views are irrelevant).
As to the PR, it's pretty hard to make particle physics accessible to other physicists, let alone the general public. The essence of the question that BaBar and Belle were trying to answer is "Is CP violated in strong interactions?". It generally takes several years of university physics just to understand the question. The most "successful" PR projects never even seem to get to the crux of the project.
Incidentally, the answer is "yes, maximally". Your tax dollars at work!
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:1)
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:2, Interesting)
Not quite. We are investigating CP violation in the weak interaction. CP is conserved in the strong interaction.
I hope not. In one paragraph: There is matter and there is antimatter. Astronomers tell us that the universe is completely made
Some basics on experimental particle physics (Score:4, Informative)
Well, I am a physicist and here is some additional information (hopefully not bad PR):
LHC is the biggest and most powerful particle collider ever built. It is a proton-proton collider that collides proton beams together with 14 TeV (tera electronvolts) center-of-mass energy (if memory serves).
CMS (= compact muon solenoid) is actually quite big detector. Its main purpose is to find the so called Higgs boson. The existense of the Higgs boson is required by the Standard Model of particle physics (one good book on the basics of particle physics (for people who already understand quite a bit of physics and math) is: Francis Halzen, Alan D. Martin: Quarks and Leptons: An Introductory Course in Modern Particle Physics). CMS, as most other particle physics experiments has an onion-like structure. The innermost layer is called a tracker which is used to (surprise, surprise) find the tracks of the particles produced in the collision. There is also a magnetic field in the tracker so the curvature of the particle tracks can be used to determine their momenta. The next layers are called electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters. These are used to measure the energies of the particles. And finally there are the muon chambers that are used to detect the muons (muon is like an electron but only heavier).
There are also other big detectors in the LHC experiment like e.g. ATLAS.
One good source of information on particle physics are CERN summer student lectures [webcast.cern.ch] available in Real-media format.
Re:Some basics on experimental particle physics (Score:5, Insightful)
You did fine.
CMS (= compact muon solenoid) is actually quite big detector. Its main purpose is to find the so called Higgs boson.
See, that's the sort of thing I was talking about. The CMS home page [cmsinfo.cern.ch] doesn't describe this at ALL. It has a FAQ page.. which promptly goes into details about the construction of the detector and how big it is without ever explaining why the thing is being built. A wikipedia link at the bottom eventually explains it all, but this is a rarity in my experience. It's written for physicists, by physicists.
Part of the problem I have as a non-physicist is that whenever I have to tell someone where I work, they immediatley want to know what the laboratory does, and why. It's difficult to explain the experiments when all you know is that they're building the biggest magnet ever.
Eventually my explanations fail to satisfy, and 9 times of 10 the conversation ends with someone asking "and my taxes are paying for that??" Public interest in theoretical research labs is already pretty damn low, and near as I can see a lack of explanation in layman's terms only hurts it further. Most folks are willing to accept that some types of study may never result in something they can buy at the store, but I also think they'd appreciate having a way to understand why it's important anyways.
Re:Some basics on experimental particle physics (Score:2, Informative)
You did fine. ;)
I'm glad I was able to explain at least something clearly. Maybe there is hope for me yet...
It indeed seems that the CMS home page is written for physicists or physics students. It basically tells nothing a non-physicist or non-engineer would like to know. This is quite sad.
The CERN public pages [web.cern.ch] seem to be more newbie-friendly.
The purpose of these experiments and the importance of the results to our understanding of the universe is indeed important to explain... Not only becau
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:2)
We figure that after inventing the web we don't really need any more PR. Better to lie low for a while after a mistake that big.
Re:The Whoda Whata (Score:2)
Re:Acronyms (Score:2)
Join CAT - the Committee to Abolish TLA's*.
*Three Letter Acronyms.
Re:Acronyms (Score:2)
Ten years later... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ten years later... (Score:1)
obligatory comments (Score:3, Funny)
Re:obligatory comments (Score:1)
Actually, now that I think about it, that kinda worries me. I wonder how long it will take before 100% CGI pr0n is created. I shudder to think of the ugliness you could produce with such a thing, such as CGI kiddie pr0n.
Imagine explaining that to a judge. "No your honor, these are CGI images. All characters appear
Re:obligatory comments (Score:4, Funny)
Re:obligatory comments (Score:2)
Really? I've never seen a THIN angle lens before.... With this resolution though, you might actually get all 8 pixels of her, so hmm...
Re:obligatory comments (Score:1)
20 people to develop (Score:5, Funny)
Re:20 people to develop (Score:1)
*flap*flap*flap*
designed and tested in mad town, eh? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:designed and tested in mad town, eh? (Score:2)
that's where the europeans will come in (Score:2)
cheesy article (Score:3, Informative)
It took 6 years (Score:5, Funny)
so it runs pentium 2s?
This is not the case in glorious Nippon! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is not the case in glorious Nippon! (Score:2)
Re:This is not the case in glorious Nippon! (Score:1)
you're right.. this site sucks anymore..
Re:This is not the case in glorious Nippon! (Score:2)
How about some more hardware details? (Score:5, Informative)
-theGreater.
Say Bye Bye Little Blue Planet (Score:4, Funny)
Discovering the mass of the Higgs-Boson will, of course, shrink the Earth to the size of a pea, which is the fate of most type 13 planets.
not so great (Score:2, Funny)
What they don't tell you is that because it's based on ImageMagick, it will still barf on certain malformed JFIF header blocks.
Everyone say "cheese"! (Score:4, Funny)
It won't stop the top of someone's head from being outside the shot though. Or the other one, the "pot-plant on head" effect.
If this is the Compact Muon Experiment (Score:3, Funny)
great (Score:1)
Can it... (Score:2)
-5, Lame joke adaptation
Or just increase storage (Score:1)
Re:Or just increase storage (Score:1, Interesting)
Testing at UW/Madison? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Testing at UW/Madison? (Score:3, Funny)
They may even get a few asses to collied together and take a pic of whatever that is. It'll be like 1 trillian bits of assyness, but asses move so slow compared to how this thing is designed, that each picture will be identical.
oh well.
Re:Testing at UW/Madison? (Score:1)
Re:Testing at UW/Madison? (Score:1)
Collision Revision (Score:2)
Maybe from the observations made by this device we can find a way to make an Ideal Machine. [wikipedia.org]
a billion protons (Score:5, Funny)
But I thought that a mole of protons (6E23 protons) weighed 1 gram. So common knowledge and this article are off by several (14?) orders of magnitude. Hmmm. Or are they the same size but very different in mass?
Or when the author said "a million times smaller," maybe she/he intended "a jillion times smaller."
Re:a billion protons (Score:2)
Or a better explanation probably comes from the article editor - "The average Joe can't comprehend something smaller than a mosquito, or a number larger than a million, so substitute those
Re:a billion protons (Score:1)
Yes, TFA is indeed quite ambiguous on its numbers.
Could I get that in Libraries of Congress per fortnight?
Re:a billion protons (Score:3, Funny)
Yes. Yes, you can. Four terabits per second is about 1.2 [google.com] exabits per fortnight. There are about 10 terabytes [jamesshuggins.com], or 80 terabits in the Library of Congress. So do the math [google.com], and you get about 16,000 LoC/ftnt.
Anyone else remember the thread in which the thrust generated by the space shuttle's rocket boosters was measured in (burning) Libraries of Congress?
Re:a billion protons (Score:2)
Barrel of monkeys (Score:3, Funny)
In addition to Libraries of Congress, I want to see barrels of monkeys [galactic-guide.com] become a standard measurement. Sort of the emotional axis orthogonal to the Libraries of Congress axis in information-space.
AlpineR
Re:Barrel of monkeys (Score:2)
Re:a billion protons (Score:2, Funny)
with the energy of about 14 buzzing mosquitoes -- but all that energy is compressed into two protons, which are a million times smaller than that annoying bug.
"The power resulting from these collisions is 11,000 watts,"
A buzzing mosquito should therefore be about 780W! I need to harness a few of this to power my car. Who needs horsepower (735W) when mosquitopower are more powerful.Re:a billion protons (Score:1)
>A buzzing mosquito should therefore be about 780W! I need to harness a few of this to power my car. Who needs horsepower (735W) when >mosquitopower are more powerful.
Energy!=Power
Power=Energy/Time
Energy=Power*Time
The time taken for the collision is almost an instant. Not sure what the Energy of a "buzzing mosquito" (WTF kind of unit is that?) is.
Certainly if you had an endless supply of "buzzing mosquito's"(lol), you could run your car
Re:a billion protons (Score:1)
Re:a billion protons (Score:2, Informative)
Re:a billion protons (Score:2)
And, in a wonderful "pot-kettle-black" moment, you say TFEstimate is off by about 14 orders of magnitude...
For those of us who studied maths to get degrees in computers, there's really only about a half doze
Re:a billion protons (Score:1)
Oh dear! (Score:3)
Super Bowl Reviews (Score:2, Insightful)
Could have been in America (Score:5, Interesting)
We had the opportunity to deploy this in America.
The Super Conducting Supercollider [hep.net] project in Waxahachie, TX was a federal basic science research project that lost its funding and was dismantled in 1993. The tunnel was dug. All the technological hurdles seemed to be jumpable. But the American people were less than interested in funding stuff that wasn't directly translatable into tastier hamburgers or cooler cars. The Democrat-led congress cancelled the $2 billion budget and America resigned itself to let other countries lead in this field.
I only mention the 'democrat-led' congress because I do not believe they have earned the slurr of 'tax-and-spend-liberals'. This is one example why.
Re:Could have been in America (Score:2, Interesting)
If you live in Texas, you know why.
Re:Could have been in America (Score:2)
Ah, that's a bunch of hooey. I live in Dallas and spent every spring since '78 in Waxahachie. You get beyond the fire ants once you dig bellow 6'. The SSC tunnels went considerably deeper than that.
And besides, there's one thing I learned from my misspent youth: want to get rid of a fire ant mound? One gallon of gas and a match do the trick right nice.
Who cares (not a troll) (Score:2)
Obligatory (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory (Score:1)
It IS a cluster of 300 CPU boards....
nice (Score:1)
holy crap (Score:1)
just thought the /. crowd should know that. feel my uber l33tness now
B-)
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Damn (Score:2, Funny)
Wonder if Best Buy will be Selling by the Summer? (Score:1)
eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Yeah, the big shutdown
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Re:eXtremely Fast Tracker at Fermilab (Score:2)
Regional Calorimeter Trigger? (Score:2)
Microbe DNA???? (Score:2)
Not geeky enough if... (Score:1)
My words of wisdom (Score:2, Funny)
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Indeed (Score:3, Funny)
And another part of the CMS/LHC project at UW (Score:4, Informative)
Text of the article:
The University of Wisconsin - Madison [wisc.edu] has deployed 35 5.6TB Xserve RAID [apple.com] storage arrays in a single research installation as part of an ongoing scientific computing initiative.
The Grid Laboratory of Wisconsin (GLOW) [wisc.edu], a partnership between several research departments at the University of Wisconsin, have installed almost 200TB, or 200,000GB, of Xserve RAID arrays.
As a comparison, 200TB of storage is enough to hold 2.75 years of high definition video, 25,000 full length DVD movies, 323,000 CDs, 20 printed collections of the Library of Congress [loc.gov], or over 1000 [wikipedia.org] Wikipedias [wikipedia.org].
The GLOW storage installation is physically split between the departments of Computer Sciences [wisc.edu] and High Energy Physics [wisc.edu]. Each Xserve RAID is attached to a dedicated Linux node running Fedora Core [redhat.com] via an Apple Fibre Channel PCI-X Card [apple.com] and is either directly accessed via various mechanisms, such as over the network via gigabit ethernet, or aggregated using tools such as dCache [dcache.org].
The storage is primarily used to act as a holding area for large amounts of data from experiments such as the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) [wisc.edu] and ATLAS [web.cern.ch] experiments at the Large Hadron Collider [web.cern.ch] at CERN [cern.ch].
Think of the porn oppertunities! (Score:1, Funny)
500 gigs per second (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:500 gigs per second (Score:2)
I visited Fermi once, and they have a massive facility to archive, search, and process the petabytes of data they create. It was mentioned that if you make a bad search request, it can go off for a month or so.
There are PhD theses waiting in your last question, if you care to apprentice yourself to the physicists.
Re:500 gigs per second (Score:2)
Sounds like a job for... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds like a job for... (Score:1)