Abstract

We report the use of streaming data interfaces to perform fully online data processing for serial crystallography experiments, without storing intermediate data on disk. The system produces Bragg reflection intensity measurements suitable for scaling and merging, with a latency of less than 1 s per frame. Our system uses the CrystFEL software in combination with the ASAP::O data framework. In a series of user experiments at PETRA III, frames from a 16 megapixel Dectris EIGER2 X detector were searched for peaks, indexed and integrated at the maximum full-frame readout speed of 133 frames per second. The computational resources required depend on various factors, most significantly the fraction of non-blank frames ('hits'). The average single-thread processing time per frame was 242 ms for blank frames and 455 ms for hits, meaning that a single 96-core computing node was sufficient to keep up with the data, with ample headroom for unexpected throughput reductions. Further significant improvements are expected, for example by binning pixel intensities together to reduce the pixel count. We discuss the implications of real-time data processing on the 'data deluge' problem from recent and future photon-science experiments, in particular on calibration requirements, computing access patterns and the need for the preservation of raw data.

Details

Title
Real-time data processing for serial crystallography experiments
Author
White, Thomas; Schoof, Tim; Yakubov, Sergey; Tolstikova, Aleksandra; Middendorf, Philipp; Karnevskiy, Mikhail; Mariani, Valerio; Henkel, Alessandra; Klopprogge, Bjarne; Hannappel, Juergen; Oberthuer, Dominik; Ivan De Gennaro Aquino; Egorov, Dmitry; Munke, Anna; Sprenger, Janina; Pompidor, Guillaume; Taberman, Helena; Gruzinov, Andrey; Meyer, Jan; Hakanpää, Johanna; Gasthuber, Martin
Pages
97-108
Section
Research Papers
Publication year
2025
Publication date
Jan 2025
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography
e-ISSN
20522525
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3171851315
Copyright
© 2025. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.