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Hack Chat Transcript, Part 2

A event log for Life at CERN Hack Chat

Big science, big rewards

dan-maloneyDan Maloney 03/01/2023 at 22:100 Comments

caladan12:39 PM
I think it's C++ on CentOS 7

daniel valuch12:39 PM
actually, guess what it was

Rosy Schechter12:39 PM
Here are the libraries for data analysis: https://root.cern/

daniel valuch12:40 PM
what was the mean time between failures when LHC started in 2008? The first days?

April Morone12:40 PM
I love C++ and Python.

daniel valuch12:40 PM
any guesses?

Thomas Shaddack12:40 PM
What about something where even C won't do? VHDL, Verilog, what are you using for FPGAs?

Dan Maloney12:40 PM
Two weeks?

simon.dancose12:40 PM
1 second?

Christopher12:40 PM
Three months?

daniel valuch12:40 PM
now, 15 years later, when everything is tuned and works well, we can get even 2 weeks

Thomas Shaddack12:41 PM
Also, how are you coping with the molasses-like nature of light? That thing is s-l-o-w. How do you compensate for that in the signal speed?

daniel valuch12:41 PM
but what it was then?

dallas12:41 PM
4 hours?

daniel valuch12:41 PM
about 5 minutes. Impressive for such a complex system. You can have MTBF of millions of hours. Plug it in million times and here we go

Christopher12:41 PM
Woah

daniel valuch12:42 PM
5 minutes. By the first week of running, it was about 1 hour. People working days and nights. That was the best times I have ever had. Hacking

daniel valuch12:42 PM
hacking such a machine. I still get goose bumps thinking about it even now

dallas12:42 PM
very high caliber hacking

April Morone12:42 PM
Understandably.

daniel valuch12:43 PM
now the big lady is running reliably and quitely. We work on many smaller machines and projects

caladan12:44 PM
oh, you call it big lady?

Dan Maloney12:44 PM
Isn't there a Really Big Lady in the works now?

daniel valuch12:44 PM
sometimes so reliably, that I start to miss the nigh calls. LHC did not call for 3 months. What is going on :-)

simon.dancose12:44 PM
How does the LHC behave when there's an earthquake in Europe?

April Morone12:44 PM
lol.

twlostow12:45 PM
it's not afraid of earthquakes. but it shivers in fear when a leap second arrives :-)

daniel valuch12:45 PM
we are restarting the complex as we speak. The Linacs are already running, it will take about 1 week for each subsequent machine. LHC is foreseen to have first beam the week before the easter

daniel valuch12:45 PM
@simon.dancose yes, LHC can see all Earth movements

Thomas Shaddack12:46 PM
How do you compensate for them?

daniel valuch12:46 PM
The Moon, water level in the Geneva lake, and all the Earth quakes.

Thomas Shaddack12:46 PM
Or are they just seen in the data?

daniel valuch12:47 PM
The moon and water is slow. Out of 9000 magnets in LHC, maybe 7000 are correctors. The moon phases are even programmed in the control system as a real time feed forward correction

daniel valuch12:47 PM
aperture where beam circulates in LHC at high energy is about 1x1mm. Any movement is visible

simon.dancose12:47 PM
cool, I figured so. Moon cycle needed pre-planned compensating.

daniel valuch12:48 PM
first the beam is scraped at collimators, for for a bigh earthquake, like the one from Turkey which was visible even by my pendulum clock, that would be an instant beam dump

Dan Maloney12:49 PM
In case you missed it:

Dan Maloney12:49 PM

https://hackaday.com/2023/01/28/an-atomic-pendulum-clock-accurate-enough-for-cern/

HACKADAY DAN MALONEY

An Atomic Pendulum Clock Accurate Enough For CERN

That big grandfather clock in the library might be an impressive piece of mechanical ingenuity, and an even better example of fine cabinetry, but we'd expect that the accuracy of a pendulum timepiece would be limited to a sizable fraction of a minute per day.

Read this on Hackaday

daniel valuch12:49 PM
and indeed, there are sensors and accelerometers all over the place. For example the huge earthquake in Indonesia at the beginning of 2000's was already recorded by the Atlas sensors

daniel valuch12:49 PM

https://cds.cern.ch/record/824438?ln=en

daniel valuch12:49 PM
THE ASIAN EARTHQUAKES DETECTED IN THE ATLAS CAVERN

At the end of December, mysterious vibrations were picked up by the deformation sensors under the feet that are to support the ATLAS detector. It transpired that they had detected waves produced by the earthquakes responsible for the terrible tsunami in Asia.

daniel valuch12:51 PM
But other accelerators in the world can see these too. For example in DESY in Hamburg, they can see when people go to work during the day

dallas12:51 PM
when you do an emergency beam dump, do the proton packets just get released into a slab of lead or some other absorbent material? how long till that target is able to be handled?

twlostow12:52 PM
Previous accelerator in the LHC tunnel (the LEP) showed beam instabilities reflecting the schedule of the Geneva-Lyon TGV line :-)

daniel valuch12:52 PM
oh no. The LHC beam can make it through 50 meters of concrete... There is a 900 ton graphite/steel block to absorb it

daniel valuch12:53 PM

https://lhc-machine-outreach.web.cern.ch/components/beam-dump.htm

CERN

LHC beam dumps

The challenge The nominal LHC beam contains an unprecedented stored energy of 350 MJ, contained in 2808 bunches with a beam sigma of the order of 0.3 mm. The extremely high destructive power of such a beam imposes an external dump, where the beam must be extracted completely from the LHC, diluted to reduce the peak energy density and then absorbed in a dedicated system.

Read this on Cern

Thomas Shaddack12:53 PM
What would happen to the concrete? Molten-through capillary-sized hole?

daniel valuch12:54 PM
the beam carries so much energy, that it needs to be spread while dumping. Otherwise it will destroy the target. Some people say there will be plenty of very radioactive diamonds in the beam dump after the life time of the machine :-)

Dan Maloney12:54 PM
It's like a runaway truck ramp for protons

dallas12:54 PM
"The extracted beam is swept in a quasi-circular figure by two sets of orthoganally deflecting dilution kickers"

daniel valuch12:54 PM
The beam has a kinetic energy of (now) more than 400 MJ. That is a runaway train. Not a truck. And needs to be disposed in 89 microseconds

daniel valuch12:55 PM
Imagine what a train would do when crashing into a barrier. But this is 10^14 protons

daniel valuch12:55 PM
same macroscopic effect

Rosy Schechter12:56 PM
Do you have a favorite experiment? Or a finding that you're particularly proud of?

dallas12:56 PM
is there any video available of a dump event on the absorber cylinder?

twlostow12:56 PM
or a swarm of 10^14 mosquitos, each flying at a pretty badass mosquito speed :-)

simon.dancose12:58 PM
Daniel, thank you so much for your insight!

daniel valuch12:58 PM
@Rosy Schechter I have spent a lot of time with LHC. The stabilizing system is my baby and I have feelings about it. But lately, I started to like very much the other end. My collegues from the operations group say it is a machine at the end of the food chain. The smallest one. But there are many scientists coming from many institutes. And they have say 1 week of time to install their experiment and collect all data

daniel valuch12:58 PM
the atmosphere is very different from LHC. Those are big fish. A lot of people involved, a lot of competition. The Isolde is exactly the opposite.

Rosy Schechter12:59 PM
right on. looking it up. thank you!

daniel valuch12:59 PM
You help the users to achieve their goals, help them to do their experiments. They are happy, thankful, often bring a good bottle to the control room at the end of their run

April Morone12:59 PM
As will I.

Rosy Schechter1:00 PM
that's got to be really satisfying!

April Morone1:00 PM
Agreed.

daniel valuch1:01 PM
@Rosy Schechter trust me, it is. A very different feeling. Both are good. But very different. While in LHC I am expected to solve any problem in 1 hour regardless, this is an expert service. You do your best, because you want to help them

daniel valuch1:02 PM
and it is very nice to collaborate with different people every time. I like both. With LHC we are like a family. The operators rely on experts and the experts rely on operators.

SimonAllen1:02 PM
Is our time up? Thank you, Daniel; this was a most intriguing incite into LHC operation.

daniel valuch1:03 PM
don't end it. We have just started :-)

daniel valuch1:03 PM
time flies fast. Indeed.

Dag Spicer1:03 PM
Thank you, Daniel!

Dan Maloney1:03 PM
Holy cow, I just looked at the clock and saw that it's after 1:00. I'm not going to enforce Swiss precision on this end of the chat, but if Daniel has somewhere else to be, we'll give him the chance to log out. Otherwise, we can keep chatting!

Thomas Shaddack1:03 PM
Time flies. There is a rotting clock somewhere here.

April Morone1:03 PM
Thank you, Daniel.

Rosy Schechter1:03 PM
thank you so much @daniel valuch!

daniel valuch1:03 PM
@Dan Maloney I just need to move 5 meter to bed. So no rush

Dan Maloney1:04 PM
Unless the Big Lady calls ;-)

daniel valuch1:04 PM
it is a nice concept here. I recall the times of IRC

daniel valuch1:05 PM
dromant https://op-webtools.web.cern.ch/vistar/vistars.php

caladan1:05 PM
The Big Lady is off for now.

Dan Maloney1:05 PM
Yeah, that's why we keep doing it this way. A little retro vibe is nice now and then

daniel valuch1:05 PM
all is cold and tests are running already. It takes weeks to restart

daniel valuch1:06 PM
6/8 sectors are at 1.8K, 1-2 and 3-4 is around 4K. Will need few more days

dallas1:07 PM
so you work on ISOLDE now, no longer on call for main beam support, is that correct?

caladan1:07 PM

https://op-webtools.web.cern.ch/Vistar/vistars.php?usr=LHC2

CERN

Vistars

Read this on Cern

daniel valuch1:07 PM
as an expert for systems, you are always on call. There is also a stand-by service, where people must be reachable and come on site within 45 minutes. But those are expected to solve only a limited subset of problems

Dusan Petrovic1:08 PM
Thank you @daniel valuch and everyone who participated!

dallas1:08 PM
are you on the french or swiss side?

daniel valuch1:08 PM
there is always an army of experts, people who designed and built the particular systems, who can be contacted in case the stand-by is not able to resolve the problem

twlostow1:09 PM

daniel valuch1:09 PM
I have the office on the French side, I also live in France. But we commute to the Swiss side multiple times a day. There are labs, cafeteria, other services

twlostow1:09 PM
btw, the orange pipes at the ceiling are the RF feed coax lines for the SPS. Carrying 1 MW of RF at 200 MHz, each.

Thomas Shaddack1:10 PM
coax or waveguides?

twlostow1:10 PM
these are coax

daniel valuch1:10 PM
yes, that is output of the 6x 1MW amplifiers. Two of those are solid state. A transistor amplifier which needs its own building

daniel valuch1:11 PM
coax, as the frequency is low. In LHC we run at 400MHz, but there we use waveguide alredy. 58x24cm. Heavies frequencies in the industry

daniel valuch1:11 PM
I need to have a crane operating license. I got it one day before becoming a professor. Just a different kind of exam :-)

caladan1:12 PM
Why do you need a crane license?

Thomas Shaddack1:12 PM
how does the crane recognize if you have a licence? Our forklift didn't ask.

daniel valuch1:12 PM
High power RF is a heavy industry. Look at the photos... 1 meter of waveguide weights 50 kilos

daniel valuch1:13 PM
@Thomas Shaddack the crane does not recognize, but the safety people do :-)

daniel valuch1:13 PM
plus you don't want to smash your multi million worth equipment

Michael Möller1:14 PM
I was at a TED talk at CERN a few years ago, got to look at the surroundings, but notthing below ground so to speak.

daniel valuch1:14 PM
getting underground is almost impossible for visitors. During shutdowns, you can visit the experiments underground. It is very impressive. But to get to the machine is impossible

twlostow1:15 PM
@Thomas Shaddack to answer your HDL question: yes, most hard real-time controls are done on FPGAs (hard RT = determinism from 1ms to anywere near a fraction of a nanosecond). CERN is mostly VHDL, but there are some misfits that use SystemVerilog or even things like Migen/Misoc/LiteX.

daniel valuch1:15 PM
I recommend to visit, also the surface installations are nice to see https://visit.cern

dallas1:17 PM
DEFINI

daniel valuch1:17 PM
the next long shutdown will be in about 3-4 years time, usually an open days is organized. Then people can visit also the underground facilities. Last time about 120000 people came

daniel valuch1:18 PM
my favourite part getting people underground was asking the people in the elevator. Who wants to press a button at CERN? One or two rose their hand. So I proposed to press the -1 button in the elevator. They said they will not wash their finger :-)

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