Global Earth Observation Integrated Data Environment GEOIDE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Global Earth Observation Integrated Data Environment GEOIDE

Description:

Improving data management is among the highest priority challenges facing NOAA ... Vision NOAA's GEO-IDE is envisioned as a 'system of systems' a framework ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:87
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: johnb83
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Global Earth Observation Integrated Data Environment GEOIDE


1
Global Earth ObservationIntegrated Data
Environment (GEO-IDE)
Presentation to
Presenter name and affiliation
2
The information revolution
Need a quote that conveys the significance of the
period of history we are in -- the Information
Revolution.  "Get with it or become fossilized
and irrelevant." maybe some reference to how
much the nation as a whole is investing in
integrating systems.  (Contrast with NOAA
...) Anyone have a gem to go here?
3
NOAA Top Ten Challenges1
  • 10) Alphabet Soup
  • 9) Stove Pipes
  • 8) Integration
  • 7) Architecture
  • 6) Data Sharing
  • 5) User Needs
  • 4) Maximizing Benefits
  • 3) Communication
  • 2) Data Management
  • 1) Execution
  • Vice Admiral Lautenbacher in address to American
    Meteorological Society Annual Meeting, January
    30, 2006

4
Data Management - a top priority
  • Improving data management is among the highest
    priority challenges facing NOAA integrated data
    management is at the heart of the GEOSS concept

5
Why is improved integration needed? Important
societal issues require data from many observing
systems
Discipline Specific View
Whole System View
Current systems are program specific, focused,
individually efficient. But incompatible, not
integrated, isolated from one another and from
wider environmental community
5
6
Example Problem Coastal Inundation Erosion
involves multiple systems
Temperature
Human Population Distribution Scenarios
Societal Infrastructure Coastal Scenarios
Permafrost
Bathymetry
Coastal Inundation Erosion Scenarios
Winds
Reanalysis Coupled Climate Models
Biochemical Impacts(Ecosystems)
Winds
Temperature
Sea Ice
Tides
  • Ocean
  • Volume
  • Circulation
  • Quantity

Temperature
Sea Level Change
RiverRun-off
Glaciers
Observations (75)
Models (25)
Land Mass Ocean Properties (20)
Human Impacts
Physical Impacts
Sea Level Change (12)
( in parenthesis represents data sets which must
be integrated)
6
7
Data Management a top Federal Priority
  • Congressional mandate
  • Public Law 102-567, section 106 directs NOAA to
    (among other things)
  • Develop effective interfaces among the
    environmental information systems of NOAA and
    other departments and agencies
  • Develop and use nationally-accepted formats and
    standards
  • Integrate and interpret data from different
    sources

8
Todays Challenges
  • Incompatible syntax (formats) and semantics
    (terminology) among science disciplines within
    NOAA. Thousands exist. Several examples
  • Naming standards Surface Air Temperature
  • Meteorology (WMO) named Temperature/dry bulb
    temperature
  • Meteorology (air pollution) named Boundary layer
    temperature
  • Oceanography named Air Temperature
  • Location standards (latitude, longitude,
    elevation)
  • Lat/Lon can be degrees/minutes/seconds or degrees
    to tenths and hundredths
  • Latitude E/W, 0-180 positive and negative, or
    0-360 running east or west
  • Z used to designate elevation in both atmosphere
    and ocean but positive is up in the atmosphere
    and down in the ocean
  • Formats (50 formats used within NOAA
    translators and standards needed)
  • GRIB, NetCDF, HDF and others used for gridded
    data
  • BUFR, NetCDF, and many others used for
    observations
  • Potential for no answer or the wrong answer to
    important societal questions due to separate NOAA
    data management systems

9
NOAAs GEO-IDE
  • Scope NOAA-wide architecture development to
    integrate legacy systems and guide development of
    future NOAA environmental data management systems
  • Vision NOAAs GEO-IDE is envisioned as a
    system of systems a framework that provides
    effective and efficient integration of NOAAs
    many quasi-independent systems
  • Foundation built upon agreed standards,
    principles and guidelines
  • Approach evolution of existing systems into a
    service-oriented architecture
  • Result a single system of systems (user
    perspective) to access the data sets needed to
    address significant societal questions

10
Goals
  • Through GEO-IDE NOAA will
  • Identify and address integration gaps in data
    management systems
  • Create interoperability across existing data
    management systems
  • Develop and adopt data standards for formats and
    terminology
  • Integrate measurements, data, and products
  • and will achieve
  • Cost avoidances in NOAA business through improved
    efficiency and reduced duplication
  • Better integration of data and products across
    disciplines
  • Reduced risks for US IEOS and GEOSS

11
GEO-IDE - an essential component ofenvironmental
information management for NOAA
Integrated observing, data processing and
information management systems Connected by
NOAAs Integrated Data Environment Contributes
to U.S. Global Earth Observation System (USGEO)
and International Global Earth Observing System
of Systems (GEOSS).
12
Why Now?
  • Societal Benefits
  • Improve weather forecasting
  • Reduce Loss of Life and Property from
    Disasters
  • Protect and Monitor our Ocean Resources
  • Understand, Assess, Predict, Mitigate and Adapt
    to Climate Variability and Change
  • Support Sustainable Agriculture and
    Combat Land Degradation
  • Understand the Effect of Environmental Factors on
    Human Health Well Being
  • Develop the Capacity to Make Ecological
    Forecasts
  • Protect and Monitor Water Resources
  • Monitor and Manage Energy Resources
  • Critical to USGEO
  • six near term opportunities
  • Uncoordinated development leads to
    inefficiencies, incompatibilities, and
    duplication of effort.
  • Integration of data among systems is needed to
    answer questions that address diverse societal
    benefits
  • Increased efficiency is needed to handle the
    expected exponential increase in data volumes
    that will occur over the next decade

12
13
Scope
  • Concerned with environmental and geospatial data
    and information obtained or generated from
    worldwide sources to support NOAA's mission (as
    defined in NOAA Administrative Order 212-15)
  • Does not consider administrative support systems
    such as finance, personnel, acquisition or
    facilities management
  • Includes all aspects of data management,
    including data acquisition, ingest, data
    processing, archival and access

14
Vision
  • System of systems a framework to effectively
    and efficiently integrate NOAAs many systems
  • Minimize impact on legacy systems
  • Utilize standards
  • Work towards a service-oriented architecture

15
Approach
  • Each NOAA LO/program/project continues to manage
    its data independently
  • Standards
  • Adopt, adapt and only as a last resort, create
  • Open, inclusive process for adoption
  • Inclusive not exclusive use of standards
  • Service Oriented Architecture

Reference Federal CIO Council, Jan 06
"Services and Components Based Architectures A
Strategic Guide for Implementing Distributed and
Reusable Components and Services in the Federal
Government"
16
Standards
  • Standard names and terminology
  • Metadata standards
  • e.g. FGDC and ISO 19115 w/ remote sensing
    extensions
  • Standard formats for delivery of data/products
  • WMO, NetCDF, HDF, GeoTIF, JPEG, etc.
  • Web Services Standards
  • World Wide Web Consortium
  • OGC (Features, Coverage, GML)
  • OPeNDAP

17
Service-Oriented Architecture
  • Under an SOA, capabilities are built one at a
    time to create Web Services
  • The fabric of the SOA is built upon standards
    for
  • discovery (e.g. CF, FGDC, ISO, SQL)
  • transport (e.g. HTTP, FTP, OPeNDAP)
  • use (e.g. netCDF, HTML, etc.)
  • Can be tightly coupled (SOAP) or loosely coupled
    (REST)

18
SOA Concept
19
Key Development Strategies
  • Maintain and minimize impact on legacy systems
  • Evolutionary development through pilot projects
  • Coordinate activities through Communities of
    Interest organized by Data Types
  • Grids, time-series, moving-sensor
    multi-dimensional, profiles, trajectories,
    geospatial framework, point data and metadata

20
Project Management
Undersecretary for Atmosphere and Oceans
NOAA Goal ThemeCommerce Transportation
NOAA Goal ThemeWeather Water
NOAA Goal ThemeEcosystems
NOAA Goal ThemeClimate
21
Project ManagementRoadmap to Implementation
22
Project ManagementPerformance Measures
  • Performance Measure Outcomes
  • Ability to address multi-disciplinary societal
    issues
  • Cost avoidance of future investments in Data
    Management
  • Metrics
  • Number of interoperable Data Systems as measured
    by
  • Data Sets within science disciplines
  • Data Sets among science disciplines
  • Number of users accessing cross-discipline data
    to address societal issues
  • DOC Strategic Goal Supported
  • Observe and Manage the Earth's Environment to
    Promote Sustainable Growth

23
Future Direction - Priorities
  • FY07 Work with scientists/data system managers to
    assess requirements and systems
  • Develop enterprise architecture and GEO IDE
    Implementation Plan
  • Implement standards process
  • Active out-reach activities
  • FY08/09 Incrementally execute work packages
  • Develop data standards and interoperability
    mechanisms, e.g., translators and directory
    services
  • Direct, test and evaluate changes being made to
    data management systems
  • FY10/11 Re-evaluate architecture related to new
    data systems (across NOAA with national
    /international partners)

24
Conclusions
  • NOAA faces daunting challenges of vastly
    increasing data volumes and an increasing need
    for interdisciplinary use of data
  • NOAA is committed to enhancing access and
    ensuring data and products of enduring value are
    preserved for future generations
  • NOAA has initiated several activities to actively
    respond to these challenges. GEO-IDE is a key
    component

25
Backup Slides
  • Risk Management
  • Architectural compliance

26
Risk Management
  • NOAAs Integrated Data Management System is not a
    traditional IT Investment Project
  • Integration as opposed to new development
  • No initial hardware investment and Modest
    software investment
  • Large up front effort to do Enterprise
    Architecture
  • Hardware/software from existing data management
    systems will be integrated
  • This Enterprise Architecture Development IS a
    risk reduction effort

27
Risk Management Architecture
28
Architectural Compliance and Standards
  • The project creates and executes the integrated
    management component of the NOAA Enterprise
    Architecture
  • Consistency with NOAA Architecture Standards
  • NOAA Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and
    Execution Process (PPBES)
  • Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) metadata
    standards,
  • NOAA Observing System Architecture (NOSA)
  • Geospatial One-Stop
  • COTS Software and Commodity Hardware
  • COTS applications software and previously
    developed government software
  • Commodity hardware
  • Information Quality Standard (Section 515). NOAA
    Guidelines to ensure and maximize Quality,
    Objectivity, Utility, Integrity (in support of
    Reproducibility)
  • Accessibility Standard (Section 508) compliance
  • Government Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA)

29
Architectural ComplianceObserving System
Architecture Component -ERD
Mission Goal
Stake-holder/User
drives
drives
Programs
owned by
Owner
have
provides info to
supported by
Support
Capability Requirements
Observing System
Data Handling System
provides data to
Operator
is type of
operated by
contains
Environmental Parameter Requirement
Sensing Element
senses
Platform / Station
Drives the need to measure
situated on
located at
is a
Location
Environmental Parameter
Human
Sensor
is
Mobile
Fixed
30
Architectural ComplianceIntegrated Data
Management Component -ERD
produce
Data Handling System
Observing Systems Other Data Sources
Applications
contain
contain
Products
provide
delivers to
Peripherals
Data
delivered via
Network Services
travels over
yield
Services
contains
delivers to
Peripherals
Peripherals
delivered via
contains
delivers to
delivers to
Web Servers
Archive Systems
User
delivers to
delivers to
31
Architectural Compliance
OMB Business Model
Services to Citizens
Program Admin
Compliance
Support Delivery of Services
Internal Operations/Infrastructure
Inter-Agency
Intra-Agency
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com