Burt Holzman
Fermilab
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Featured researches published by Burt Holzman.
computer science and information engineering | 2009
I. Sfiligoi; D C Bradley; Burt Holzman; Parag Mhashilkar; Sanjay Padhi; F. Würthwein
Grid computing has become very popular in big and widespread scientific communities with high computing demands, like high energy physics. Computing resources are being distributed over many independent sites with only a thin layer of Grid middleware shared between them. This deployment model has proven to be very convenient for computing resource providers, but has introduced several problems for the users of the system, the three major being the complexity of job scheduling, the non-uniformity of compute resources, and the lack of good job monitoring.Pilot jobs address all the above problems by creating a virtual private computing pool on top of Grid resources. This paper presents both the general pilot concept, as well as a concrete implementation, called glideinWMS, deployed in the Open Science Grid.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
B. B. Back; W. Kucewicz; Andrzej Olszewski; A. Budzanowski; C. Halliwell; L. Rosenberg; P. Steinberg; M. Reuter; W. Skulski; J.-L. Tang; K. W. Wozniak; C. Henderson; Willis Lin; B. Wyslouch; E. Garcia; C. Reed; I.C. Park; G. van Nieuwenhuizen; A. H. Wuosmaa; Baker; Burt Holzman; C. Vale; G. S. F. Stephans; S. Manly; R. R. Betts; R. Verdier; G.A. Heintzelman; D.S. Barton; P. Sarin; A. Carroll
The charged-particle pseudorapidity density dN(ch)/d eta has been measured for Au+Au collisions at sqrt[s(NN)] = 130 GeV at RHIC, using the PHOBOS apparatus. The total number of charged particles produced for the 3% most-central Au+Au collisions for /eta/<or=5.4 is found to be 4200+/-470. The evolution of dN(ch)/d eta with centrality is discussed, and compared to model calculations and to data from proton-induced collisions. The data show an enhancement in charged-particle production at midrapidity, while in the fragmentation regions, the results are consistent with expectations from pp and pA scattering.
Physical Review C | 2005
B. B. Back; W. Kucewicz; A. Iordanova; A. Budzanowski; C. Halliwell; Andrzej Olszewski; L. Rosenberg; P. Steinberg; M. Reuter; W. Skulski; J.-L. Tang; K. Wozniak; C. Henderson; Willis Lin; B. Wyslouch; E. García; C. Reed; A. A. Bickley; M. Nguyen; G. van Nieuwenhuizen; Baker; I.C. Park; G. S. F. Stephans; S. Manly; R.R. Betts; M. Ballintijn; R. Verdier; Marguerite Tonjes; G.A. Heintzelman; D.S. Barton
This paper describes the measurement of elliptic flow for charged particles in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(sNN)=200 GeV using the PHOBOS detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The measured azimuthal anisotropy is presented over a wide range of pseudorapidity for three broad collision centrality classes for the first time at this energy. Two distinct methods of extracting the flow signal were used in order to reduce systematic uncertainties. The elliptic flow falls sharply with increasing eta at 200 GeV for all the centralities studied, as observed for minimum-bias collisions at sqrt(sNN)=130 GeV.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
B. B. Back; Russell Richard Betts; J. Chang; W.C. Chang; C. Y. Chi; Y.Y. Chu; J. B. Cumming; J. C. Dunlop; W. Eldredge; S. Y. Fung; R. Ganz; E. Garcia; A. Gillitzer; G. Heintzelman; W. Henning; David Jonathan Hofman; Burt Holzman; J. H. Kang; E. J. Kim; S. Kim; Y. Kwon; D. McLeod; Alice Mignerey; M. Moulson; V. Nanal; C.A. Ogilvie; R. Pak; A. Ruangma; D. E. Russ; R. Seto
An excitation function of proton rapidity distributions for different centralities is reported from AGS Experiment E917 for Au+Au collisions at 6, 8, and 10.8 GeV/nucleon. The rapidity distributions from peripheral collisions have a valley at midrapidity which smoothly change to distributions that display a broad peak at midrapidity for central collisions. The mean rapidity loss increases with increasing beam energy, whereas the fraction of protons consistent with isotropic emission from a stationary source at midrapidity decreases with increasing beam energy. The data suggest that the stopping is substantially less than complete at these energies.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
B. Alver; A. Iordanova; K. W. Wozniak; C. Halliwell; A. C. Mignerey; C. Loizides; A. Olszewski; H. Seals; P. Steinberg; M. Hauer; F.L.H. Wolfs; S.S. Vaurynovich; C. Henderson; Willis Lin; B. Wyslouch; E. Garcia; P. Walters; C. Reed; A. A. Bickley; G. van Nieuwenhuizen; Baker; C. Vale; G. S. F. Stephans; S. Manly; R. R. Betts; M. Ballintijn; M. B. Tonjes; D.S. Barton; E. A. Wenger; A. Carroll
This paper presents the first measurement of event-by-event fluctuations of the elliptic flow parameter v_2 in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 200GeV as a function of collision centrality. The relative non-statistical fluctuations of the v_2 parameter are found to be approximately 40%. The results, including contributions from event-by-event elliptic flow fluctuations and from azimuthal correlations that are unrelated to the reaction plane (non-flow correlations), establish an upper limit on the magnitude of underlying elliptic flow fluctuations. This limit is consistent with predictions based on spatial fluctuations of the participating nucleons in the initial nuclear overlap region. These results provide important constraints on models of the initial state and hydrodynamic evolution of relativistic heavy ion collisions.
Journal of Physics G | 2001
B. B. Back; B B Back; R.R. Betts; J. Chang; W.C. Chang; C. Y. Chi; Y.Y. Chu; J. B. Cumming; J. C. Dunlop; W. Eldredge; S. Y. Fung; R. Ganz; E. Garcia; A. Gillitzer; G. Heintzelman; W. Henning; David Jonathan Hofman; Burt Holzman; J. H. Kang; E. J. Kim; S. Kim; Y. Kwon; D. McLeod; Alice Mignerey; M. Moulson; V. Nanal; C.A. Ogilvie; R. Pak; A. Ruangma; D. E. Russ
Collisions of Au + Au have been studied at beam kinetic energies of 6.0, 8.0 and 10.8 GeV/nucleon at the AGS facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Particles emitted from the collisions were momentum analysed and identified in a magnetic spectrometer. Proton rapidity distributions are compared with those expected for isotropic emission from a stopped source and it is concluded that there is a substantial amount of transparency at all three beam energies even for the most central collisions. Strangeness production were studied via measurements of K, and spectra. All three indicate a strong enhancement of strangeness production relative to pp-collisions at similar centre-of-mass energies.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2014
Parag Mhashilkar; Anthony Tiradani; Burt Holzman; Krista Larson; I. Sfiligoi; Mats Rynge
Scientific communities have been in the forefront of adopting new technologies and methodologies in the computing. Scientific computing has influenced how science is done today, achieving breakthroughs that were impossible to achieve several decades ago. For the past decade several such communities in the Open Science Grid (OSG) and the European Grid Infrastructure (EGI) have been using GlideinWMS to run complex application workflows to effectively share computational resources over the grid. GlideinWMS is a pilot-based workload management system (WMS) that creates on demand, a dynamically sized overlay HTCondor batch system on grid resources. At present, the computational resources shared over the grid are just adequate to sustain the computing needs. We envision that the complexity of the science driven by Big Data will further push the need for computational resources. To fulfill their increasing demands and/or to run specialized workflows, some of the big communities like CMS are investigating the use of cloud computing as Infrastructure-As-A-Service (IAAS) with GlideinWMS as a potential alternative to fill the void. Similarly, communities with no previous access to computing resources can use GlideinWMS to setup up a batch system on the cloud infrastructure. To enable this, the architecture of GlideinWMS has been extended to enable support for interfacing GlideinWMS with different Scientific and commercial cloud providers like HLT, FutureGrid, FermiCloud and Amazon EC2. In this paper, we describe a solution for cloud bursting with GlideinWMS. The paper describes the approach, architectural changes and lessons learned while enabling support for cloud infrastructures in GlideinWMS.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2001
R. Nouicer; B. B. Back; Russell Richard Betts; K. Gulbrandsen; Burt Holzman; Wojciech Kucewicz; Willis Lin; Johannes Mülmenstädt; G. van Nieuwenhuizen; H. Pernegger; M. Reuter; P. Sarin; G. S. F. Stephans; Vincent Tsay; C. Vale; B. Wadsworth; A. H. Wuosmaa; B. Wyslouch
Abstract The PHOBOS experiment is well positioned to obtain crucial information about relativistic heavy ion collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), combining a multiplicity counter with a multi-particle spectrometer. The multiplicity arrays will measure the charged-particle multiplicity over the full solid angle. The spectrometer will be able to identify particles at mid-rapidity. The experiment is constructed almost exclusively of silicon pad detectors. Detectors of nine different types are configured in the multiplicity and vertex detector (22,000 channels) and two multi-particle spectrometers (120,000 channels). The overall layout of the experiment, testing of the silicon sensors and the performance of the detectors during the engineering run at RHIC in 1999 are discussed.
Journal Name: J.Phys.Conf.Ser.219:072013,2010; Conference: Prepared for 17th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 09), Prague, Czech Republic, 21-27 Mar 2009 | 2010
D Bradley; O Gutsche; K Hahn; Burt Holzman; S Padhi; H Pi; D Spiga; I Sfiligoi; E Vaandering; F Würthwein; Computing Projects
With the evolution of various grid federations, the Condor glide-ins represent a key feature in providing a homogeneous pool of resources using late-binding technology. The CMS collaboration uses the glide-in based Workload Management System, glideinWMS, for production (ProdAgent) and distributed analysis (CRAB) of the data. The Condor glide-in daemons traverse to the worker nodes, submitted via Condor-G. Once activated, they preserve the Master-Worker relationships, with the worker first validating the execution environment on the worker node before pulling the jobs sequentially until the expiry of their lifetimes. The combination of late-binding and validation significantly reduces the overall failure rate visible to CMS physicists. We discuss the extensive use of the glideinWMS since the computing challenge, CCRC-08, in order to prepare for the forthcoming LHC data-taking period. The key features essential to the success of large-scale production and analysis on CMS resources across major grid federations, including EGEE, OSG and NorduGrid are outlined. Use of glide-ins via the CRAB server mechanism and ProdAgent, as well as first hand experience of using the next generation CREAM computing element within the CMS framework is discussed.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
B. B. Back; R.R. Betts; Markus Friedl; R. Ganz; K. Gulbrandsen; Burt Holzman; W. Kucewicz; Willis Lin; Johannes Mülmenstädt; Gerrit Jan van Nieuwenhuizen; R. Nouicer; H. Pernegger; M. Reuter; P. Sarin; Vincent Tsay; C. Vale; B. Wadsworth; A. H. Wuosmaa; Bolek Wyslouch
Abstract PHOBOS is one of the four experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory. PHOBOS utilizes silicon sensors to measure charged particle multiplicity distributions and to track particles in a 2-arm spectrometer. The detector consists of 450 silicon pad sensors. Nine different pad geometries are used to match the different physics needs of the experiment. A relatively high granularity, of up to 1536 channels per sensor, is used in the spectrometer. The multiplicity detector uses 128 and 64 channel sensors and the charge deposition per pad is measured to determine the multiplicity of single events. All sensors are of the double-metal silicon pad type with pad sizes from 1 up to 4 cm 2 . They are produced in Taiwan by the ERSO foundry under supervision of Miracle Co. and National Central University. An extensive testing procedure makes it possible to select sensors suited for use in PHOBOS. Detector modules consisting of up to 5 sensors are read out with integrated chips of either 64 or 128 channels. The test results of the sensors and the performance of the assembled detector modules are discussed.