astronomy research networking 22 february 2002 jim kennedy gemini observatory important...

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Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun Venkataraman, NAIC Steve Grandi, NOAO Ryusuke Ogasawara, NAOJ Pacific Rim Networking Meeting

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Page 1: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Astronomy Research Networking22 February 2002

Jim KennedyGemini Observatory

Important Contributions byDick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC

Tom Troyland, UKYArun Venkataraman, NAIC

Steve Grandi, NOAORyusuke Ogasawara, NAOJ

Pacific Rim Networking Meeting

Page 2: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Research Objectives

• Understand the Universe– Its Origins– Current State– Its “Destination”

• Origins of Life in the Universe

• Connecting Relativity and QCD, (GUTs/TOEs)

• And Other Modest Goals

Page 3: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Research Tools and Venues

• Multi “Color” Observations, Pictures & Spectra– Radio– IR– Visible– UV– X-Rays– Cosmic Rays

• Earth-Based – Less expensive and maintainable, often remote

• Space-Based– Removes atmospheric effects, even more remote

Page 4: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Data Types and Analysis

• Pictures - 8Kx8K, 16Kx16K, and larger

• Wavelength Spectra - like above

• Temporal Spectra - from time series

--------------------------------------------------• Raw Data Calibration and “Reduction”• Image Enhancement and Reconstruction• Aperture Synthesis – Passive and Radar• Fourier and Spherical-Harmonic Transforms• Other Sophisticated Analysis Techniques

Page 5: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Typical Issues

• Multi-Site, Multinational Coordination

• Geographically Diverse Communities

• Analysis of Large Data Sets

• Harsh and Remote Environments

• Economical Operations

• Effective Communication with the Public

Page 6: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Typical Network Approaches

• Videoconferencing (H.323), Telecollaboration

• Remote Observing, Sea Level or Remote Site

• Automated Observing Sequences

• Data Delivery to Scientists and Archives

• Remote Analysis of Data, Grid Processing

• Network-based Education and Outreach

Page 7: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Five Examples• Gemini Observatory: Hawaii, Arizona, Chilean Andes

– Two 8m, IR/O Telescopes, at 14,000 and 9,000 ft - Seven-nation Partnership– Hawaii, US Mainland, Australia, Chile, Canada

• Arecibo Observatory: Puerto Rico & New York– 1,000 ft Radio Telescope - US National Facility– Worldwide collaborations

• NOAO: Arizona, New Mexico, Chilean Andes– Visible and IR nighttime and solar facilities - US National Facility– US Mainland, Hawaii, Australia, Chile, Worldwide collaborations

• ALMA: Chile and elsewhere– 64-Antenna Radio Array at 16,400 ft in Chile - Multinational Partnership– Chile, Japan (planned), Others

• Subaru: Hawaii, Japan– 8m, O/IR Telescope, at 14,000– Hawaii, Japan

Page 8: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Kitt Peak

Arecibo

ALMA

Gemini South

QuickTime™ and aPhoto - JPEG decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Subaru

Page 9: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Caveats

Each of these facilities has a great deal in common regarding their application needs, although the balance between them varies.

The numbers that follow may be too conservative since. In several cases they assume some supercomputer-level on-site processing, rather than external centers or Grid processing. This assumption could prove incorrect.

Page 10: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Each Gemini Telescope

• Video/Audio (low latency)• Real-Time Remote Observing (low latency)• Real-Time Reduction (quick look)• Data Delivery to Observers • Data Archives (CADC)• Remote Analysis• Outreach (low latency)

Bandwidth RequirementsTodayAverage: 6 Mbps Peak: 25 Mbps

2005 Average: 18 Mbps Peak: 50 Mbps

Page 11: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Gemini’s Primary Research Links(Logical Topography)

Gemini North

Gemini South

CADC Archive

Page 12: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Arecibo (NAIC)

• Video/Audio (low latency)• Real-Time Remote Observing (low latency)• Real-Time Analysis (e.g. pulsars and radar)• Data Delivery to Observers• Data Archives• Remote Analysis (near-real-time and batch )• Outreach (low latency)

Bandwidth RequirementsTodayAverage: 10 Mbps Peak: 45 Mbps SoonAverage: 20 Mbps Peak: 200 Mbps

Page 13: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

NOAO: KPNO, CTIO, NSO(Each Site)

• Video/Audio (low latency)• Real-Time Remote Observing (low latency)• Data Delivery to Observers (several scopes)• Data Delivery to Internet (10-min turn)• Data Archives (NVO)• Remote Analysis• Outreach (low latency)

Bandwidth RequirementsTodayAverage: 10 Mbps Peak: 35 Mbps

Soon Average: 25 Mbps Peak: 60 Mbps

Page 14: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

ALMA

• Video/Audio (low latency)• Real-Time Remote Observing (low latency)• Real-Time Time Series Reduction (on site?)• Data Delivery to Observers (all are remote)• Data Archives (NVO)• Remote Analysis (supercomputer/Grid)• Outreach (low latency)

Bandwidth Requirements2006 Average: 32 Mbps Peak: 130 Mbps

Page 15: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

NAOJ: Subaru

• Real-Time Remote Observing (low latency)• Data Delivery to Observers (several scopes)• Data Delivery to Internet (near real time)• Remote Analysis• Video/Audio (low latency) • Outreach (low latency)

Bandwidth RequirementsSoon Average: 12 Mbps Peak: 155 Mbps

Page 16: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

Future Needs

The rapid growth rate of instrument technology and sophisticated data analysis makes future bandwidth and QoS requirements difficult to predict with accuracy.

We risk to underestimate them on more than a four- or five-year time scale.

Page 17: Astronomy Research Networking 22 February 2002 Jim Kennedy Gemini Observatory Important Contributions by Dick Crutcher, NCSA, UIUC Tom Troyland, UKY Arun

End