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TechSocial Series - June 2024

05 June 2024, 4:00 pm–6:00 pm

TechSocial

Get energised for summer with ARC (in association with KQCodes) and the ever popular TechSocials as Nikos Konstantinidis, from the UCL Physics and Astronomy Department, brings us an insight into the Machine Learning developments happening at CERN's Large Hadron Collider to enable discovery science

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Milan Malfait

Location

Function space - 1st Floor
90 High Holborn
London
WC1V 6LJ

Abstract for Discussion

The ATLAS detector at the LHC produces data at a rate 10x the world internet traffic! One of the greatest challenges is to process some of these data at real-time and decide within micro-secs which collision events to process further and eventually record to permanent store. In about five years time, the challenge will become bigger yet, when the High-Luminosity era of the LHC gets underway. To address this challenge, ATLAS is building a new, powerful triggering system, the Global Hardware Trigger, which is made of custom-designed ATCA cards including some of the most powerful FPGAs in the market. Key for the success of Global is to develop and deploy on the FPGAs Machine Learning algorithms that are optimised for physics performances vs. FPGA resources vs latency. The UCL ATLAS team is heavily involved in this work and I will give some examples, as well as discussing the bigger picture for the ATLAS and LHC science programme over the next ~15+ years.

*Please note: This months TechSocial will be earlier in the month - the first Wednesday of June*

Free registration via Pretix to follow soon

For more information about the TechSocial series, including future dates and speakers please visit TechSocial Series

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About the Speaker

Nikos Konstantinidis

at Physics and Astronomy Department

Nikos has been at UCL since 2002. He has worked on the ATLAS experiment since 2000 and has made leading contributions in triggering, the real-time selection of interesting collision events, as well as in the ATLAS Higgs physics programme, in particular the search for pair-production of Higgs bosons, a rare process that has become the flagship of the LHC physics programme in recent times. During 2013-23, he was the UCL ATLAS group leader and during 2016-18 he was the Principal Investigator of the ATLAS UK collaboration of 15 institutes. In 2016, he led the successful bid to STFC and established the first-ever CDT in Data Intensive Science, a programme running with great success until today, being its co-Director until 2023.