GEANT4 2016
Introduction
Geant4 is a toolkit for the simulation of the passage of particles through matter. Its areas of application include high energy, nuclear and accelerator physics, as well as studies in medical and space science. For more information refer to the official web page of GEANT4.
Installed Versions
There are currently different Versions of Geant4 installed on the Cluster:
- Geant4/9.6
- Geant4/10.X
Using Geant4
If you want to find out more about Geant4 on the HPC cluster, you can use the command
module spider geant4
This will show you basic informations e.g. a short description and the currently installed version. To load the desired version of the module, use e.g. the command
modudule load Geant4/9.6
Always remember: this command is case sensitive! After loading the module, you can use the program by using the command:
GRAS
The Geant4 Radiation Analysis for Space (GRAS) tool is a Geant4-based application that deals with common analyses types in 3D geometry models. More information and the download of the GRAS package are found on the GRAS web page (login required). In order to use GRAS on the cluster the following steps need to be done:
- download the GRAS-package version 3.3 (this version is working on the cluster, other versions may or may not work)
- unpack the tar-file in your home-directory on the cluster (or another location of your choice, the following steps assume you use $HOME)
- change into the directory gras-03-03
- load the modules Geant/9.6 and CMake
- execute the following commands:
mkdir build cd build . . .
After that the GRAS package is installed and ready to use. The package comes with a few examples, to test if everything work you could:
cd $HOME/gras-03-03 #this adds GRAS to your environment . bin/gras-env.sh cd examples/magfield/example1/ module load python #before you need to apply the patch below python launch_example.py python plot_results.py
After this you see a number of new files, namely txt-, log-, and png-files (and some more). You need to copy these files to your local machine to view them.
In order to have the example above working you need to change a path in launch_example.py:
os.chdir("../../../bin/Linux-g++")
should be
os.chdir("../../../bin")
Note:
If you are using GRAS in any way for your work, please reference the official GRAS paper with the following lines:
GRAS Paper Official GRAS publication in IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science: G. Santin, V. Ivanchenko, H. Evans, P. Nieminen, E. Daly, "GRAS: A general-purpose 3-D modular simulation tool for space environment effects analysis", IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 52, Issue 6, 2005, pp 2294 - 2299