The European
Cern research
centre is to build a huge data store as part of its quest to understand the most
basic particles in the universe.
The organisation runs the 23km
Large
Hadron Collider, the biggest scientific instrument in the world, built over
10 years and costing €5bn.
This ring under Switzerland and France will collide particle streams at the
speed of light, using four computer systems in the ring to monitor the results.
This is creating an enormous amount of data, up to 500Mbps, and the Collider
will be run for 120 days per year, producing 15 petabytes of information
annually. Not all of this will be stored, but at least eight petabytes will be
kept.
"This poses some interesting storage problems," said Charles Curran, manager
of Cern's IT department.
"No-one in the Linux community is writing code that allows you to handle that
amount of data. We could have written it ourselves but that would seem to be a
very bad idea as it takes a lot of time and would never be completed."
Cern has managed to overcome the problem using an application called Castor
HSM which uses IBM
and Sun
Microsystems disc and tape storage at a cost of over four million Swiss
francs per year in media and storage expenses.
But eight petabytes is just the start, and the team plans to expand further
until they find the Higgs Boson particle they are looking for.
The Higgs Bosun, sometimes known as the God particle, is the holy grail of
particle physics. It has never been irrefutably seen but if discovered would
answer one of the key questions of the universe: why objects have mass.
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