Collaborative computing, pioneered at UWMadison, helped drive LHC analysis
When scientists at the Large Hadron Collider in Europe announced the appearance of a new particle among the pieces of smashed protons, Miron Livny saw a huge scientific success. But the University of Wisconsin-Madison computer scientist reveled in more than a fascinating research finding. Collaboration has been guiding Livny's work for decades, and it is a large part of UW-Madison's contribution to the search for the Higgs boson. Whenever a physicist in the United States wants to sift the avalanche of data collected at the LHC, they tap Open Science Grid, a network of computing resources for which Livny serves as principal investigator. Read more