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12–15 May 2025
Online
Europe/Zurich timezone
Registration is open and free!

The environmental impact, carbon and sustainability of computing in the ATLAS experiment

15 May 2025, 12:30
20m
Online

Online

15 minute talk Submitted Talks

Speaker

Zach Marshall (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))

Description

ATLAS, one of two general-purpose experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), operates a large internationally-distributed computing infrastructure, including over 1 EB of managed data on disk and tape and almost one million simultaneously running CPU cores. Upgrades for the High-Luminosity LHC will increase the required computing resources by a factor of 3–4 by the beginning of the 2030s, and by an order of magnitude before the conclusion of data taking at the beginning of the 2040s. These resources are spread over around 100 computing sites worldwide. Efforts are underway within the experiment to evaluate and mitigate various aspects of the environmental impact of the sites, with the additional long-term goal of making recommendations to the sites that will significantly reduce the total expected environmental impact in the HL-LHC era. These efforts take several forms: building awareness in the experiment community, adjusting aspects of the computing policy, and modifications of data center configurations, either in ways that take advantage of particular features of ATLAS work or in generic ways that reduce the environmental impact of the computing. This contribution describes the ongoing investigations and approaches that have already provided useful, and actionable outcomes that can be implemented today.

Author

Zach Marshall (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))

Presentation materials

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