Top Banner
Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)
15

Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Jan 17, 2016

Download

Documents

Donald Hunt
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules

Mike Ronan

LBNL

(presented by Tony Johnson)

Page 2: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Goals

• Disparate groups working worldwide on Linear Collider physics studies have produced complementary tools using a variety of languages and methodologies

• From a physics perspective it is desirable to directly compare the results from these different tools

• A framework for accessing different modules in a uniform way has been developed, allowing one analysis module to be used with all tools– Methodology not specific to linear collider studies

Page 3: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Methodology

• Use Java for building framework:– Good OO language for rapid development of analysis

algorithms– Use Java Native Interface (JNI) to call different

language modules and retrieve results back into Java objects

– Adapt each tool to use common java interfaces • E.g. All generators create same HEPevt

– Use existing Java analysis tools for data analysis• JAS, JAIDA, etc.• US Linear Collider physics tools (Java)

– 3,4 vector tools, jet finders, vertex finding, etc.

– Provide access to Java based scripting languages• jython, pnuts, dynamic java etc.

Page 4: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Event Generators Interfaced

• Pandora-Pythia V2.2 Monte Carlo using PanoraPythia interface package– C++ and Fortran 77

• Pythia v6.2 Monte Carlo with Circe beamstrahlung simulation– Fortran 77

• Whizard V1.22 Monte Carlo with ISR and Circe turned on– Fortran 95

Page 5: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)
Page 6: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Implementation

• Use Java native Interface (JNI)– For interfacing to generators only need to implement a

few methods• setParameter() setProcess()• init()• generateEvent()• getEvent() – Access to HEPEvt, common to most generators• finish()

– Infrastructure can be reused with little change between generators

– Use standard tools (gmake etc.) to build .so file• Other libraries (i.e. CERNLIB) can be statically linked into .so

file– Rarely needs to be rebuilt

• All interactive work can be done in Java

Page 7: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Usage Example

• Details of how to set up generator varies from generator to generator– All follow same basic pattern– All generate same set of Java objects representing

generated particles

Page 8: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

More about HEPEvt classes

HEPEVTCommon Block

Java Object Model

HEPEvtParticle

ParticleType

Page 9: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Pandora, Pythia, Whizard Comparisons

• FMCParticle jet distributions– Number of “correctly”

reconstructed jets– Angular distribution

(CosθMax) of jets– Jet finder final “ycut”– Direct reconstruction of Z

and Higgs through hadronic decays.

• Good agreement between Pandora, Pythia and Whizard simulation

Page 10: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Simulation Packages• LCD Fast Monte Carlo v1.4 (Java)

– Charged particle momentum smearing based on detailed error estimates

– Gaussian energy smearing for photons and neutral hadrons– Acceptance and energy threshold requirements– Perfect energy flow

• TESLA SimDet V4.0 (Fortran 77)– Parameterized charged and neutral energy smearing based on full

(Brahms) Monte Carlo simulations– Acceptance requirements– A new energy flow algorithm

• JLC QuickSim V2.1 includes (C++)– Charged particle momentum and position smearing based on detailed

error estimates– Simulation of individual calorimeter cell hits and cluster finding– Track-cluster association to separate charged and neutral clusters

Page 11: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

DetectorSimulationEvent Generators

Interoperability

Pythia

Pandora

Whizard

EventSelection

LCD FastMC

TESLASimDet

JLCQuickSim

AnalysisCode

Java

Fortran

C, C++

Page 12: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

US FastMC, SimDet & QuickSim Detector Simulations

• Direct reconstruction of Z and Higgs through hadronic decays is shown for Higgstrahlung signal events only. Jet-jet mass distributions for US FastMC, TESLA SimDet and JLC QuickSim detector simulations are reconstructed for Whizard-MadGraph Monte Carlo events including ISR and Circe beamstrahlung effects.

• The LCD FastMC jet-jet mass resolution is significantly better since it assumes “perfect” energy flow. TESLA SimDet and JLC QuickSim detector simulations give comparable jet energy resolutions but different mean reconstructed jet-jet masses.

Page 13: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Whizzard: MadGraph Higgstrahlung Event Analysis

Page 14: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Conclusions and Future

• Hand coded JNI solutions works well for interfacing to event generators, simple simulation programs– Brings advantages of Java based analysis to Fortran and C,C++

code– Allows direct physics comparisons of disparate tools

• New tools are now available which will make this approach more scalable– JACE http://reyelts.dyndns.org:8080/jace/

• Integration with gcc-xml, or POOL dictionary?

– Web/Grid services– LCIO – Common IO system for international linear collider studies

• see talk by Frank Gaede at this conference)

• All tools used in this study available from:– http://www.lbl.gov/~ronan/docs/lcdstudies/

Page 15: Java Physics Generator and Analysis Modules Mike Ronan LBNL (presented by Tony Johnson)

Higgstrahlung