科技报告详细信息
Past and Future Operations Concepts of NASA's Earth Science Data and Information System
Moses, John F ; Lindsay, Francis ; Behnke, Jeanne
关键词: ALGORITHMS;    CLOUD-TO-CLOUD DISCHARGES;    DATA ACQUISITION;    DATA PROCESSING;    DATA SYSTEMS;    EARTH OBSERVING SYSTEM (EOS);    EOS DATA AND INFORMATION SYSTEM;    METADATA;    REMOTE SENSING;    SATELLITE ORIENTATION;    SOFTWARE ENGINEERING;   
RP-ID  :  IN51F-0695,GSFC-E-DAA-TN75870
学科分类:地球科学(综合)
美国|英语
来源: NASA Technical Reports Server
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【 摘 要 】

NASA committed to support the collection and distribution of Earth science data to study global change in the 1990's. A series of Earth science remote sensing satellites, the Earth Observing System (EOS), was to be the centerpiece. The concept for the science data system, the EOS Data and Information System (EOSDIS), created new challenges in the data processing of multiple satellite instrument observations for climate research and in the distribution of global-coverage remote sensor products to a large and growing science research community. EOSDIS was conceived to facilitate easy access to EOS science data for a wide heterogeneous national and international community of users. EOSDIS was to provide a spectrum of services designed for research scientists working on NASA focus areas but open to the general public and international science community. EOSDIS would give researchers tools and assistance in searching, selecting and acquiring data, allowing them to focus on Earth science climate research rather than complex product generation. Goals were to promote exchange of data and research results and expedite development of new geophysical algorithms. The system architecture had to accommodate a diversity of data types, data acquisition and product generation operations, data access requirements and different centers of science discipline expertise. Steps were taken early to make EOSDIS flexible by distributing responsibility for basic services. Many of the system operations concept decisions made in the 90s continued to this day. Once implemented, concepts such as the EOSDIS data model played a critical role developing effective data services, now a hallmark of EOSDIS. In other cases, EOSDIS architecture has evolved to enable more efficient operations, taking advantage of new technology and thereby shifting more resources on data services and less on operating and maintaining infrastructure. In looking to the future, EOSDIS may be able to take advantage of commercial compute environments for infrastructure and further enable large scale climate research. In this presentation, we will discuss key EOSDIS operations concepts from the 1990's, how they were implemented and evolved in the architecture, and look at concepts and architectural challenges for EOSDIS operations utilizing commercial cloud services.

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