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COCOA

The COnfigurable Calorimeter simulatiOn for Ai (COCOA) is a nearly-hermetic calorimeter simulated with Geant4 and interfaced to the Pythia8 event generator. This open-source simulation is aimed to support the development of machine learning algorithms in high energy physics that rely on realistic particle shower modeling, such as reconstruction, fast simulation, and low-level analysis.

The COCOA calorimeter comprises a barrel and endcap system with configurable granularity, and with nearly uniform material depth distribution in pseudorapidity. An inner tracker system consisting of silicon and iron layers immersed in a magnetic field can be included optionally, along with basic tracking emulation. Output data are processed using on-board algorithms for topological clustering of calorimeter cells, graph creation, and jet clustering. The COCOA geometry is also provided in a format supporting event visualization with Phoenix.

The documentation can be found here.

Publication

DOI

Docs arXiv

Install

Docker

The most convenient way to install COCOA is to use its docker image:

docker pull ghcr.io/cocoa-hep/cocoa-hep:main
docker image tag $(docker images | grep cocoa-hep | head -n 1 | awk '{print $3}') cocoa-hep
docker run -it cocoa-hep

Please note that in this container cocoa and its dependencies are installed in /root .

Non-Docker

To simplest way to prepare all dependencies is to mount the CernVM File System and run

source setup_cvmfs.sh

Otherwise the dependencies need to be taken care of individually. The Dockerfile can be used for guidance in this case.

Then in the COCOA directory run the following commands:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ../
make -j<# cpu cores>
cd ..

Run

From within COCOA directory:

./build/COCOA - run with Geant4 User Interface.

./build/COCOA -h - show input options for batch-mode.

List of options:

  • --config (-c) <str> – path to json configuration file.
  • --macro (-m) <str> – path to Geant4 or Pythia8 macro file for event generation (can be set in json configuration file).
  • --output (-o) <str> – path (incl. name) of output ROOT file to be written (can be set in json configuration file).
  • --input (-i) <str> - path to HepMC (.hmc) input file (overrides the default path set in the HepMC macro file).
  • --seed (-s) <int> – set random seed.
  • --nevents (-n) <int> - number of events to generate (default is taken from macro).

Example:

./build/COCOA --macro  /path/to/COCOA/COCOA/macro/Pythia8/ttbar.in --config  /path/to/COCOA/COCOA/config/config_doc.json  /path/to/outputdir/output_name.root --seed 5

Convert

To convert the output files from COCOA from ROOT to hdf5 format, the util/dump_hdf5.py can be used as follows:

python util/dump_hdf5.py -i path/to/input.root -o path/to/output.h5

To see more options, pass the -h argument.

Phoenix event display

Live demo hosted here: https://cocoa-phoenix.web.cern.ch/

The phoenix directory contains the ingredients for displaying COCOA events using the HSF Phoenix software.

  • event subdirectory: scripts for dumping COCOA output ROOT files into the suitable json format.
  • packages subdirectory: the changed files with respect to the Phoenix repository, with directory structure preserved. Note that this builds the COCOA geometry.

Steps to get it fired up:

  1. clone and follow the README on the Phoenix repository to get it set up locally.
  2. replace the cloned files with the ones in the COCOA/phoenix/packages. Note that this has only been tested at a specific snapshot in the Phoenix code history.
  3. (this step can be skipped in favor of using the default event files provided). Use the dump_phoenix_eventdata.py script to parse a COCOA output file, for example:
python phoenix/event/dump_hdf5.py -i path/to/input_COCOA_file.root -o path/to/output_event_file.json -n 1
  1. Copy the json event file to packages/phoenix-ng/projects/phoenix-app/src/assets/files/cocoa/ and edit the eventFile field in packages/phoenix-ng/projects/phoenix-app/src/app/sections/cocoa/cocoa.component.ts appropriately.
  2. Compile phoenix with yarn and open in browser window!