The Cyberinfrastructure project will enable Internet communication
between remote ocean instruments and scientists' computers.
The Network Behind the Network
UC San Diego awarded $29 million for Scripps-led cyberinfrastructure project
A national consortium of oceanographic institutions has chosen UC
San Diego to receive a $29 million award to create a computer
cyberinfrastructure that will enable a vast network of
ocean-observing instruments to communicate with scientists,
students, and members of the general public.
Researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego
will lead the project funded by Joint Oceanographic Institutions
(JOI), Inc. over six years. Total funding from the
Cyberinfrastructure (CI) award might reach more than $42 million
over the course of the planned 11-year endeavor. The award will fund
development of a digital infrastructure that will let ocean
observatories collect, process, and transmit data continuously. That
computer network will complement other planned networks of buoys and
robots. These and other instruments, deployed throughout the world's
oceans, will let researchers conduct global-scale science projects.
"Routine, long-term measurement of episodic oceanic processes is
crucial to continued growth in our understanding and predictive
modeling of complex natural phenomena," said John Orcutt, principal
investigator on the Cyberinfrastructre project and a professor of
geophysics at Scripps.
UCSD's California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology (Calit2) will manage the project and, together with
Scripps and the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), will build
the cyberinfrastructure.
The cyberinfrastructure will transport real-time data streams at up
to one gigabit per second from a variety of ocean-dwelling sensors
and other instruments. The data will be available in real time via
dedicated, high-speed Internet links to any computer user. Two-way
connectivity will also allow scientists to operate robots on the
ocean floor interactivelyÑfrom their campus laboratories. Many of
these functions will be undertaken automatically without human
intervention.
Cyberinfrastructure project principal investigator John Orcutt.
The Cyberinfrastructure award is the first of three planned by JOI
for the National Science Foundation's Ocean Observatories Initiative
(OOI). The "virtual" infrastructure will parallel and underpin the
physical infrastructure of the other two projects:
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A regional, cabled network, which will "wire" a single region in
the Northeast Pacific Ocean with a high-speed optical and power
grid.
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Coastal and global networks. A global network of moored buoys
linked to shore via satellite will support planetary-scale
science projects, while existing coastal observing facilities
will be expanded to help scientists study the effects of
intense, complex forces on coastal environments.
The bulk of the cyberinfrastructure work will be done by computer
scientists and engineers at UC San Diego. Based at Calit2 and
Scripps, the project will draw on expertise in grid computing and
large-scale distributed networks at both divisions as well as the
university's San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) and National
Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research (NCMIR).
"This project will seek to leverage U.S. leadership into similar
initiatives under way around the world," said Scripps Director Tony
Haymet.
—Robert Monroe
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