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US,
Russia, China Link Global - Ring Network
ARLINGTON, Va.-The
U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), a broad consortium of
Russian ministries and science organizations and the Chinese
Academy of Sciences (CAS) today announced the start of operations
for the first round-the-world computer network ring, which will
be used for joint scientific and educational projects. Completing
the ring includes increasing the bandwidth between the United
States and China and making the first-ever fiber network connection
across the Russia-China border.
The new network increases the bandwidth
to 155 megabits per second (Mbps) between the United States
and China and continues current 155-Mbps service levels between
the United States and Russia. In addition, Russia and China
are connecting their science networks at the border cities of
Zabajkal'sk and Manzhouli-completing a ring around the Northern
Hemisphere.
"As part of the international community
of science, we share common concerns that reach across national
borders," said NSF Director Rita Colwell. "As we all aim to
strengthen our nations' capabilities in research, we also aim
to contribute to the cumulative knowledge that lifts the prospects
of people everywhere. This new network serves as both a physical
and symbolic reminder of our common goal of solving problems
and building a world of peace and prosperity."
The new network will provide both
increased reliability and flexibility for researchers as they
address scientific issues including joint responses to natural
and man-made disasters, safeguards for nuclear materials, better
understanding of the human genome, joint exploration of space,
distributed monitoring of seismic events and environmental studies
and simulations.
The network will also enable cooperation
on international fusion energy research and support the advanced
requirements of high-energy physicists. The network will also
enable collaborations between universities and local schools,
such as shared seminars, distance-learning programs and multi-national
science fairs.
Known as Little GLORIAD, the ring
"begins" in Chicago at the NSF-supported StarLight facility,
managed by the University of Illinois at Chicago and Northwestern
University. The network crosses the Atlantic Ocean to the NetherLight
facility in Amsterdam from which it continues to Moscow, then
to the Russian science city of Novosibirsk, across Siberia to
the border at Zabajkal'sk. After crossing the border to Manzhouli,
the network continues to Beijing, then Hong Kong and crosses
the Pacific Ocean to complete the ring in Chicago.
"Little GLORIAD is a giant step
in providing CAS scientists unique opportunities to cooperate
with the researchers in the United States and Russia and will
contribute significantly to the CAS initiative on knowledge
innovation," said Dr. Yan Baoping, director of the Computer
Network Information Center (CNIC), Chinese Academy of Sciences.
"The ring network is the foundation for the GLORIAD, which will
be an integral part of the cyber-network for developing the
China E-Science initiative scheduled to commence in 2006."
Little GLORIAD is being funded
in part by a $2.8 million NSF grant to the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign. Russian support for Little GLORIAD is provided
through a consortium of government Ministries and science organizations
coordinated by the Russian Research Center (RRC) "Kurchatov
Institute" and the Russian Ministry of Industry, Science and
Technology. Chinese support from CAS and through CNIC, which
coordinates China-wide networking for CAS, was finalized with
an agreement signed November 12, 2003, among CAS, the University
of Illinois and Tyco Telecommunications, which is providing
the U.S.-China and U.S.-Europe bandwidth across its Tyco Global
Network.
"GLORIAD is an historic step in
linking scientists and science resources of the three countries,"
said Dr. Evgeny Velikhov, president of the RRC Kurchatov Institute.
"Through its advanced network and grid services, it will substantially
improve the manner in which scientists, educators and students
can work with and learn from each other on pressing issues of
our day."
As the name suggests, Little GLORIAD
is a first step towards a higher-speed network---GLORIAD, shorthand
for Global Ring Network for Advanced Application Development---that
the three countries are jointly developing for a mid-2004 start.
GLORIAD is proposed to be a 10-gigabit-per-second optical network
around the entire northern hemisphere.
The U.S. leaders of the effort,
Greg Cole and Natasha Bulashova of NCSA, have been operating
U.S.-Russian NaukaNet for science and education collaboration
for five years. "Today's announcement represents an important
step in the development of the larger GLORIAD network," Cole
said. "This
new program should further enable our scientists and educators
to better communicate and cooperate with each other."
The GLORIAD network will provide
Chinese and Russian scientists, educators and students direct
connectivity to an important common interconnection point for
North American research and education networks including Internet2's
Abilene, the National LambdaRail, CANARIE, NASA's networks and
the Department of Energy's ESnet.
The GLORIAD project's partners
also include SURFnet in Amsterdam, where an experimental exchange
point into the European science and education community will
be established at the NetherLight facility. In addition to links
to the United States and Russia, this exchange point will enable
new high-speed capabilities between Europe and Asia across the
Russian science and education network.
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