New NASA Supercomputer Facility Set to Advance Earth Research

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July 23, 2012

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Ruth Dasso Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4789 
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-248

NEW NASA SUPERCOMPUTER FACILITY SET TO ADVANCE EARTH RESEARCH

WASHINGTON -- NASA soon will open a new chapter of discovery using 
enhanced Landsat Earth-observing data in a state-of-the-art, 
high-performance computing and data access facility called NASA Earth 
Exchange (NEX). This new facility is a virtual laboratory that will 
allow scientists to tackle global Earth science challenges with 
global high-resolution satellite observations. 

After extensive development and testing, NASA is making the NEX 
facility available to the research community for further research and 
development. With NASA's state-of-the-art supercomputing capacity, 
researchers can use NEX to explore and analyze large Earth science 
data sets in hours rather than months. Scientists can produce 
complex, interdisciplinary studies of world phenomena and share their 
findings instantly on the NEX platform. 

"Because of the large volume of high-resolution Landsat data, 
scientists who wanted to study the planet as a whole prior to NEX 
needed to invest tremendous amounts of time and effort to develop 
high-end computational methods rather than focus on important 
scientific problems," said Tsengdar Lee, high-end computing program 
manager at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "NEX greatly simplifies 
researchers' access to and analysis of high-resolution data like 
Landsat." 

This new facility boasts a large collection of global data sets and 
analysis tools from NASA and other agencies, including surface 
weather records, topography, soils, land cover and global climate 
simulations. Using NEX, scientists now can fit Landsat scenes 
together like a giant jigsaw puzzle to create snapshots of global 
vegetation patterns containing more than a half-trillion pixels in 
less than 10 hours. These global vegetation products, referred to as 
the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, complement the more 
standard products from the Moderate Resolution Imaging 
Spectroradiometer on NASA's Aqua satellite but with 10 times higher 
resolution. 

"The science community is under increasing pressure not only to study 
recent and projected changes in climate that likely impact our global 
environment and natural resources, but also to design solutions to 
mitigate, or cope, with the likely impacts," said Rama Nemani, a 
senior Earth scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett 
Field, Calif. "We want to change the research paradigm by bringing 
large data holdings and supercomputing capabilities together, so 
researchers have everything they need in one place." 

Developed by a team at Ames, NEX combines Earth-system modeling, 
remote-sensing data from NASA and other agencies, and a scientific 
social networking platform to deliver a complete research 
environment. Users can explore and analyze large Earth science data 
sets, run and share modeling algorithms, collaborate on new or 
existing projects and exchange workflows and results within and among 
other science communities. 

Scientists believe costs and time associated with research development 
may be reduced significantly by allowing NEX members to collaborate 
instantly in this type of large-scale supercomputing work 
environment. For example, NEX may relieve researchers from 
redundantly retrieving and integrating data sets and building 
modeling analysis codes. 

NEX uses Landsat data, which constitute a large collection of images 
collected over 40 years by a series of satellite sensors. The 
enhanced collection of Landsat data gives scientists the opportunity 
to study and understand changes on a planetary scale, looking at 
one-quarter acre at a time. 

NASA, in cooperation with the Interior Department and its science 
agency, the U.S. Geological Survey, launched the first Landsat 
satellite in 1972. The resulting 40-year archive of Earth 
observations from the Landsat fleet supports the improvement of human 
and environmental health, biodiversity, energy and water management, 
urban planning, disaster recovery and crop monitoring. The Landsat 
program is jointly managed by NASA and the Interior Department. 

For more information about the NASA Earth Exchange, visit: 

http://nex.arc.nasa.gov 

For information about the NASA Advanced Supercomputing facility, 
visit: 

http://www.nas.nasa.gov 

For more information about NASA, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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