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The on-site analysis of the cherenkov telescope array

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conference contribution
posted on 2019-07-25, 08:32 authored by A Bulgarelli, V Fioretti, A Zoli, A Aboudan, JJ Rodríguez-Vázquez, G De Cesare, A De Rosa, G Maier, E Lyard, D Bastieri, S Lombardi, G Tosti, S Bergamaschi, D Beneventano, G Lamanna, J Jacquemier, K Kosack, L Angelo Antonelli, C Boisson, J Borkowski, S Buson, A Carosi, V Conforti, P Colomé, R De Los Reyes, J Dumm, P Evans, L Fortson, M Fuessling, D Gotz, R Graciani, F Gianotti, P Grandi, J Hinton, B Humensky, S Inoue, J Knödlseder, T Le Flour, R Lindemann, G Malaguti, S Markoff, M Marisaldi, N Neyroud, L Nicastro, S Ohm, J Osborne, I Oya, J Rodriguez, S Rosen, M Ribo, A Tacchini, F Schüssle, T Stolarczyk, E Torresi, V Testa, P Wegner, A Weinstein
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observatory will be one of the largest ground-based veryhigh- energy gamma-ray observatories. The On-Site Analysis will be the first CTA scientific analysis of data acquired from the array of telescopes, in both northern and southern sites. The On-Site Analysis will have two pipelines: the Level-A pipeline (also known as Real-Time Analysis, RTA) and the level-B one. The RTA performs data quality monitoring and must be able to issue automated alerts on variable and transient astrophysical sources within 30 seconds from the last acquired Cherenkov event that contributes to the alert, with a sensitivity not worse than the one achieved by the final pipeline by more than a factor of 3. The Level-B Analysis has a better sensitivity (not be worse than the final one by a factor of 2) and the results should be available within 10 hours from the acquisition of the data: for this reason this analysis could be performed at the end of an observation or next morning. The latency (in particular for the RTA) and the sensitivity requirements are challenging because of the large data rate, a few GByte/s. The remote connection to the CTA candidate site with a rather limited network bandwidth makes the issue of the exported data size extremely critical and prevents any kind of processing in real-time of the data outside the site of the telescopes. For these reasons the analysis will be performed on-site with infrastructures co-located with the telescopes, with limited electrical power availability and with a reduced possibility of human intervention. This means, for example, that the on-site hardware infrastructure should have low-power consumption. A substantial effort towards the optimization of high-throughput computing service is envisioned to provide hardware and software solutions with high-throughput, low-power consumption at a low-cost. This contribution provides a summary of the design of the on-site analysis and reports some prototyping activities.

Funding

We gratefully acknowledge support from the agencies and organizations listed under Funding Agencies at this website: http://www.cta-observatory.org/. We gratefully acknowledge support from IBM Labs to test compression techniques.

History

Citation

Proceedings of Science, 2015, Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2015)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Source

34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherlands

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Proceedings of Science

Publisher

Sissa Medialab

eissn

1824-8039

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2019-07-25

Publisher version

https://arxiv.org/abs/1509.01963

Temporal coverage: start date

2015-07-30

Temporal coverage: end date

2015-08-06

Language

en

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