Title :
Sharing Satellite Observations with the Climate-Modeling Community: Software and Architecture
Author :
Crichton, Daniel J. ; Mattmann, Chris A. ; Cinquini, Luca ; Braverman, Amy ; Waliser, Duane ; Gunson, Michael ; Hart, Andrew F. ; Goodale, Cameron E. ; Lean, Peter ; Kim, Jinwon
Abstract :
The disparate communities of climate modeling and remote sensing are finding economic, political, and societal benefit from the direct comparisons of climate model outputs to satellite observations, using these comparisons to help tune models and to provide ground truth in understanding the Earth´s climate processes. In the context of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and its upcoming 5th Assessment Report (AR5), the authors have been working with principals in both communities to build a software infrastructure that enables these comparisons. This infrastructure must overcome several software engineering challenges, including bridging heterogeneous data file formats and metadata formats, transforming swath-based remotely sensed data into globally gridded datasets, and navigating and aggregating information from the largely distributed ecosystem of organizations that house these climate model outputs and satellite data. The authors´ focus in this article is on the description of software tools and services that meet these stringent challenges, and on informing the broader communities of climate modelers, remote sensing experts, and software engineers on the lessons learned from their experience so that future systems can benefit and improve upon their existing results.
Keywords :
artificial satellites; climate mitigation; ecology; environmental science computing; meta data; remote sensing; satellite navigation; service-oriented architecture; software tools; 5th assessment report; AR5; Earth climate processes; IPCC; climate model; climate-modeling community; distributed ecosystem; economic benefit; globally gridded datasets; heterogeneous data file formats; information aggregation; information navigation; intergovernmental panel on climate change; metadata formats; political benefit; remote sensing experts; satellite data; satellite observations sharing; societal benefit; software engineering challenges; software infrastructure; software services; software tools; swath-based remotely sensed data; Computational modeling; Data models; Distributed databases; Internet; Meteorology; Remote sensing; Satellite communication; Software development; distributed applications; domain-specific architectures; evolving Internet applications;
Journal_Title :
Software, IEEE