Ventspils University of Applied Sciences – part of the CERN network
Latvia has become part of the global high-performance computing infrastructure community by joining the CERN supercomputer network. Henceforth, large-scale scientific data processing will also take place in Latvia, facilitated by researchers from Ventspils University of Applied Sciences and the Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Center. This historic moment is confirmed by a memorandum of understanding signed on June 5th by the Minister of Finance, Arvils Ašeradens, on behalf of the Minister of Education and Science, and CERN's Director of Information Technology and Research, Joachim Mnich.
Ventspils University of Applied Sciences, Riga Technical University (RTU), the University of Latvia (LU), Rezekne Academy of Technologies (RTA), and the National Library of Latvia have pooled their high-performance computing (HPC) resources into the federated computing center "Latvia CERN CMS TIER2," allocating part of these resources to CERN for large-scale scientific data processing needs. The signing of the memorandum was also attended by Karina Šķirmante, a lecturer at Ventspils University of Applied Sciences and a researcher at the Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Center.
"The Large Hadron Collider remains the world's largest producer of scientific data," Joachim Mnich said while signing the memorandum. The resources of Latvia's supercomputers will serve the CERN CMS (The Compact Muon Solenoid) experiment, which involves using the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to simulate the Big Bang at very high energies and search for answers about the universe through measurements, aiming to uncover new physical phenomena.
Joining the CERN supercomputer network is another step for Latvia towards the goal of obtaining full CERN member state status, which could happen in a few years. At the memorandum signing event, A. Ašeradens confirmed that the government fully supports this goal and is ready to take the next step for Latvia to further integrate into CERN. Currently, since August 2, 2021, Latvia has been an associate member state of CERN.
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