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Facilitate Visualization and Distribution of NASA\u27s Environmental Science Data through Open Standards and Open Source Software for Geospatial
This paper introduces the utilization of open standards and open source software for visualization and distribution of geospatial environmental science data at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distributed Active Archive Center (ORNL DAAC). The ORNL DAAC is one of the NASA Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS) data centers. A big challenge for the ORNL DAAC (https://daac.ornl.gov) is to efficiently manage over a thousand heterogeneous environmental data, collected through field campaigns, aircraft/satellite observations, and model simulations. ORNL DAAC also has to provide tools to easily find, visualize, and access the heterogeneous data. To address this challenge, the ORNL DAAC has leveraged Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) standards and open source software to develop the Spatial Data Access Tool (SDAT, https://webmap.ornl.gov/ogc). SDAT is a suite of open standards-based web mapping, subsetting, and transformation services and applications that allow users to visualize and download geospatial data in customized spatial/temporal extents, formats, and projections. The open source MapServer/Geospatial Data Abstraction Library (GDAL) powers the backend OGC Web services of SDAT. Open source Javascript libraries, including OpenLayers, GeoExt, and proj4js, were used to create the SDAT Web User Interface and MapWidget, a light-weight Javascript library that allows SDAT visualization to be easily embedded on any webpage. SDAT also provides KML files to enable interactive data visualization in the popular Google Earth application or any KML-compatible client. SDAT provides a common framework and standard service interfaces for ORNL DAAC data holdings. SDAT user interface hides their heterogeneity from end users, and promotes their usage. SDAT facilitates integration of ORNL DAAC data resources with other related data systems. In 2016, SDAT served more than 2 million mapping requests and 72 thousand customized data downloads from over 2500 distinct data users
A Semi-Automated Workflow Solution for Data Set Publication
To address the need for published data, considerable effort has gone into formalizing the process of data publication. From funding agencies to publishers, data publication has rapidly become a requirement. Digital Object Identifiers (DOI) and data citations have enhanced the integration and availability of data. The challenge facing data publishers now is to deal with the increased number of publishable data products and most importantly the difficulties of publishing diverse data products into an online archive. The Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distributed Active Archive Center (ORNL DAAC), a NASA-funded data center, faces these challenges as it deals with data products created by individual investigators. This paper summarizes the challenges of curating data and provides a summary of a workflow solution that ORNL DAAC researcher and technical staffs have created to deal with publication of the diverse data products. The workflow solution presented here is generic and can be applied to data from any scientific domain and data located at any data center