Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Building a global federation system for climate change research: the earth system grid center for enabling technologies (ESG-CET)

R Ananthakrishnan1, D E Bernholdt7, S Bharathi8, D Brown5, M Chen7, A L Chervenak8, L Cinquini5, R Drach3, I T Foster1, P Fox5, D Fraser1, K Halliday3, S Hankin6, P Jones4, C Kesselman8, D E Middleton5, J Schwidder7, R Schweitzer6, R Schuler8, A Shoshani2, F Siebenlist1, A Sim2, W G Strand5, N Wilhelmi5, M Su8 and D N Williams3

Show affiliations


The recent release of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment Report (AR4) has generated significant media attention. Much has been said about the US role in this report, which included significant support from the Department of Energy through the Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) and other Department of Energy (DOE) programs for climate model development and the production execution of simulations. The SciDAC-supported Earth System Grid Center for Enabling Technologies (ESG-CET) also played a major role in the IPCC AR4: all of the simulation data that went into the report was made available to climate scientists worldwide exclusively via the ESG-CET At the same time as the IPCC AR4 database was being developed, the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), a leading US climate science laboratory and a ESG participant, began publishing model runs from the Community Climate System Model (CCSM), and its predecessor the Parallel Coupled Model (PCM) through ESG In aggregate, ESG-CET provides seamless access to over 180 terabytes of distributed climate simulation data to over 6,000 registered users worldwide, who have taken delivery of more than 250 terabytes from the archive. Not only does this represent a substantial advance in scientific knowledge, it is also a major step forward in how we conduct the research process on a global scale. Moving forward, the next IPCC assessment report, AR5, will demand multi-site metadata federation for data discovery and cross-domain identity management for single sign-on of users in a more diverse federation enterprise environment. Towards this aim, ESG is leading the effort in the climate community towards standardization of material for the global federation of metadata, security, and data services required to standardize, analyze, and access data worldwide.


PACS

93.85.Bc Computational methods and data processing, data acquisition and storage

93.55.+z International organizations, national and international programs

92.60.Ry Climatology

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Environmental and Earth science

Dates

Issue 1 (2007)



View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.