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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION
FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY /
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Special Features:
INTERNET2 CAN CHANGE WAY
SCIENTISTS CONDUCT RESEARCH
When Robert Ballard went on a scientific expedition to Black Sea this past
summer, he was able to take with him virtually any scientist or student who
wanted to go. With the capability of Internet2 and a high bandwidth satellite
link, scientists, for the first time, were able to work on the ocean floor
from the comfort of their university laboratories.
In the April 6 issue of EOS, the weekly newspaper of the American
Geophysical
Union, Ballard, a University of Rhode Island geological oceanographer,
describes how Internet2 could change the way scientists conduct deep-sea
research.
Internet2 is a consortium of 205 universities working with industry and the
government to develop and deploy an advanced Internet network that operates at
10 gigabits per second. "Instead of being restricted to one or two scientists
working for a few hours within the small confines of a human-operated
vehicle," said Ballard. "Scientists using remotely-operated vehicles (ROVs)
connected to Internet2 could spend an unlimited about of time on the bottom
and share, in real-time, their observations with colleagues around the
world."
The technology was put to the test this past summer when Ballard and a team
of
scientists traveled to the Black Sea for a research expedition sponsored in
part by the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office of Ocean Exploration,
and the National Geographic Society.
Ballard explains in the article that two remotely operated vehicles working
at
or near the bottom of the Black Sea transmitted eight underwater video images
and five acoustic signals via fiber optic cable up to the ships
command/control center. Six video signals, including two high-definition
images and three two-way audio channels, were transmitted off the ship via
satellite, were received by an antenna in the United States, and placed on
Internet2.
The primary Internet2 site for the expedition was the newly created Inner
Space Center at the URI Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO). Through the use
of a series of plasma screens, the Inner Space Center replicates the science
workstation aboard the ship. From the Inner Space Center, researchers can talk
with the shipboard scientists and technicians and request images at various
resolutions for examination.
"The Inner Space Center at GSO is being built to make it possible for GSO
scientists and students to participate in various sea-going expeditions
sponsored by the Office of Naval Research and NOAA's Ocean Exploration program
from their laboratories at the URI Bay Campus in Narragansett," said
Ballard.
During the expedition Internet2 was also used at the Institute for
Exploration
and Mystic Aquarium to produce live programming for the general public, who
were able to ask questions of the team at sea.
"The cost of physically transporting human beings in small numbers to
remote
regions of the world and then taking them to the bottom of the ocean in even
smaller numbers for short periods of time to explore short stretches of the
seafloor is clearly not an efficient way to explore the vast regions of our
planet," said Ballard.
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