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China Workshops December 2005 Environmental e-Science in the UK Keith Haines BMT Marine Informatics Chair: Reading University Expertise: Ocean/Atmosphere Data Assimilation Reading e-Science Centre www.resc.rdg.ac.uk NERC
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China Workshops December 2005 NERC’s Scientific Strategy Science Priorities Earth’s life-support systems (water, biogeochemical cycles, biodiversity, carbon cycle) Climate Change (prediction, mitigation, quantifying the carbon cycle, atmospheric composition, ocean circulation, ice caps) Sustainable economies (sustainable solutions for - energy, land use, climate change, hazard mitigation, agriculture) e-Science is Multidisciplinary Promotes Collaborative Research Methods University Research (including Computer Science) NERC Research Institutes: British Antarctic Survey, Proudman Ocean Lab… UK Met Office and Hadley Centre, Environment Agency...
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China Workshops December 2005 Applications Projects ProjectsRounds 1 & 2 Round 3 Climateprediction.net£434k£284k Grid for Ocean Diagnostics, Interactive Visualisation and Analysis (GODIVA) £858k Environment from the molecular level (e- Minerals) £1,679k£1,336k Grid ENabled Integrated Earth systems model (GENIE) £1,483k£1,130k The NERC DataGrid£826k£722k Grid for Coupled Ensemble Prediction Studies (GCEPS) £723k Global coastal ocean modelling£736k Creating a taxonomic e-Science£533k £5,280k£5,464k Comp./ Data Comp Data Comp Data Comp Data
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China Workshops December 2005 NERC’s e-Science programme 2 Centres of e-Science expertise 8 Collaborative Application projects e-Science Coordinator : Ned Garnett Nedg@nerc.ac.uk
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China Workshops December 2005 National Institute for Environmental e-Science Focus on promotion and supports the use of e-science and grid technologies within the UK environmental science community. Holds workshops, courses, training events, visitor programmes, demonstration projects. Also attendance from non government agencies and private sector. To date has run 38 events with over 1,800 attendees. Recent delegation from China Martin Dove: martin@esc.cam.ac.uk www.niees.ac.uk
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China Workshops December 2005 Reading e-Science Centre Regional Centre of Excellence in e-Science Building on Reading’s Environmental connections –Met Office, ECMWF, Environment Agency, ESA –Companies: BMT, Vita Nuova, Barrodale Computing Services Contributing to e-Science Middleware –Styx Grid Services –CoLinux for Campus Grids Ongoing Projects include: –Web Services for National Centre for Ocean Forecasting Products www.ncof.gov.uk –Search and Rescue at SEA (Decision Support Tool) –Geospatial Database Technology (4D Gridded data in databases) –Climate Data Analysis Toolbox (CDAT) development Enabling technology demostrators Jon Blower: jdb@mail.nerc-essc.ac.uk www.resc.rdg.ac.uk
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China Workshops December 2005 5 COMPUTATIONAL GRID PROJECTS Ensemble Climate Modelling
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China Workshops December 2005 Distributed Global Collaborations Hadley climate model cut down to run on single PC (cf. Seti@home) 105,000 people from 150 countries have donated 10,000 years of computing time to undertake climate change experiments. China >384 participants www.climateprediction.net
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China Workshops December 2005 Over 2,500 simulations over a 45 year period showed a possible temperature increase of 2 - 11°C by 2050. Results from 2,579 15 year runs by climateprediction.net Results from 127 30 year runs of the Hadley model on the Met Office supercomputer
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China Workshops December 2005 Regional Behaviour – European Rain and Snowfall Mediterranean BasinNorthern Europe Winter Summer Annual Unpublished analysis from climateprediction.net
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China Workshops December 2005 GENIE Grid-Enabled Integrated Earth System model Build fast Earth System model with distributed components Study long-term climate change and palaeoclimate Components for atmosphere, ocean, land, ice, ocean/land biogeochemistry, ocean sediments Explore model parameter space and forcings Novel techniques for model framework, integration, data management, visualization www.genie.ac.uk Response of Atlantic circulation to freshwater forcing
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China Workshops December 2005 GENIE Computing Resources National Grid Service (GT2) OxfordLeeds RALManchester Institutional Resources (GT2) Imperial Condor PoolSouthampton Condor Pool Flocked Condor Pools MatlabJython.py files Geodise Java API Condor Native Condor Web Service Globus GT2 OMII_1 Services Java ClientJava CoGOMII API.m files www.genie.ac.uk
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China Workshops December 2005 Grid for Coupled Ensemble Prediction (GCEP) Full Hadley Climate models run on PC Clusters (not HPC) Initial condition (Ocean, Ice, Land) Ensemble prediction ~10yrs =>Assimilation<= eg. Initialised ensemble forecasts of global mean temperature Hadley Centre Results Other useful predictions Thermohaline strength Poleward Ht. transport Sea Ice extent Nino3, NAO… Precipitation Snow Cover Storm Statistics.
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China Workshops December 2005 Global Coastal Ocean Modelling (GCOM) www.pol.ac.uk/gcom Coastal seas are 7% of the ocean surface area but contribute 30% of biological production. Develop model for the coastal seas to improve the understanding of their contribution to the global carbon budget. Integrate into larger Earth System models. Red = depth < 1000m
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China Workshops December 2005 e-Minerals Model atomic processes involved in environmental issues (radioactive waste disposal, pollution, weathering). Collaboration with British Nuclear Fuels studying resistance of materials to radioactive decay events. High level briefings given to: –Foundation of Science & Technology which briefs MPs and Lords –World Technology Leaders Conference in Seoul –Science and Technology in Society forum in Kyoto in September 2005 www.eminerals.org Simulation of radiation damage in the mineral zircon.
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China Workshops December 2005 3 DATA GRID PROJECTS Environmental Data Services
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China Workshops December 2005 GODIVA Data Portal Grid for Ocean Diagnostics, Interactive Visualisation and Analysis Daily Met Office Marine Forecasts and gridded research datasets National Centre for Ocean Forecasting ~3Tb climate model datastore via Web Services Interactive Visualisations inc. Movies ~ 30 accesses a day worldwide Other GODIVA software produces 3D/4D Visualisations reading data remotely via Web Services Online Movies www.nerc-essc.ac.uk/godiva
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China Workshops December 2005 GODIVA Visualisations Unstructured Meshes Grid Rotation/Interpolation GeoSpatial Databases v. Files (Postgres, IBM, Oracle) Perspective 3D Visualisation Google maps viewer
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China Workshops December 2005 Spin-Offs: Decision Support Tools and Live Data BMTs Search and Rescue at Sea decision tool linked to Met Office data with GODIVA Web Services Demonstration for UK CoastGuard New £2.2m DEWS project: Extend Marine and Health applications of Met data BMTs SARIS system BMTs OSIS system
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China Workshops December 2005 Easy-to-use, lightweight middleware for e-Science 5-minute installation Expose existing executables as services Run them from the command line exactly as if they were local programs Create workflows with simple shell scripts (above right) Perform computational steering and collaborative visualization (below right) http://jstyx.sf.net daily_means means.nc snapshot*.nc –output-refs makegif means.nc means.gif daily_meansmakegif snapshot*.nc means.gif Spin-Offs: Styx Grid Services
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China Workshops December 2005 NERC Data Grid The DataGrid focuses on federation of NERC Data Centres Grid for data discovery, delivery and use across sites Data can be stored in many different ways (flat files, databases…) Strong focus on Metadata and Ontologies Clear separation between discovery and use of data. Prototype focussing on Atmospheric and Oceanographic data www.ndg.nerc.ac.uk
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China Workshops December 2005 Literature scattered over 250 years of paper publications. Data inaccessible other than to specialist users Aim to transfer in toto the taxonomy of two groups of organisms to the web (Hawkmoths and Aroids). Broad aim: to encourage migration of taxonomy to the web. Provide data for those studying biodiversity. Encourage quality control, peer-review and the development of “consensus” taxonomies in the web environment. Develop means of citation for web- based revisions Arisaema candidissimum Photo : RBG Kew The Hawkmoth Sphinx caligineus sinicus from Beijing, China. Photo: Tony Pittaway Creating a Taxonomic e-Science
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China Workshops December 2005 Environmental e-Science needs Geospatial Data Grids –Large data (Tb Model output – Pb Satellite) –Good Geospatial tools (GIS) and standards for extension to 4D atmosphere/ocean data –Advanced remote visualisation (movies; perspective 3D) Computational Grids –Ensemble modelling increasingly important (Climate/Earth system) => HPC not critical: distributed resources OK (large data volumes) –Statistical prediction tools (averaging over atmospheric chaos) –Legacy model codes need to run multi-platform Distributed Data/Modelling Expertise –Taxonomy –Earth System modelling (Atmos. Ocean, Land, Ice, Biology, Chemistry…)
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China Workshops December 2005 Summary NERC e-Science projects are “application-oriented” – i.e. close to end users Good opportunities to engage Government Agencies and Commercial Community –Live Environmental Data –Extreme event warnings; Disaster management tools (eg. oil spills) –Commercial Decision Support tools : Tailored products and services –Software companies for databases and GIS Environmental Middleware/Software tools Globally Applicable –International Collaborations, (eg. GIS, Metadata Standards,…) –Met Office; ECMWF; Environment Agency, Maritime Companies; Seasonal Forecasting, ESA…..
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