Events FYI Headliners
Health Health Outreach Technology Research
 
Columns
Conversations
Viewpoint
Fast facts
Web mastery
Knowledge transfer
@ Work
Photographer's corner
Friday flashback
About Home Pages
Schedule
Contact
Archives
Awards

Home > Technology >

NSF extends funding for TransPAC



McRobbie


‘Digitally enabled science’ between U.S. and Asia-Pacific region supports critical internal collaborations.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has extended funding for TransPAC, the high-speed international Internet service connecting research and education networks in the Asia-Pacific region to those in the United States.

"As a vehicle for encouraging collaborations between groups in the United States and the Asia-Pacific, TransPAC has had notable success. We are pleased that the NSF has extended funding for TransPAC," said Michael McRobbie, vice president for information technology, CIO and vice president for research at IU, as well as principal investigator for TransPAC in the U.S. "This extension supports the critical international collaborations between researchers in the United States and those in the Asia-Pacific in digitally enabled science."

TransPAC supports many international collaborations, such as the Grid Physics Network for distribution and analysis of experimental results in high energy physics; the Asia-Pacific Bioinformatics Network, providing genomic data, computational resources and community support for medical and biological research; the Joint Program for Arctic Atmosphere Observation between laboratories at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and the Communications Research Laboratory in Japan; and the Japan-U.S. collaboration in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.

"NSF's continued co-funding of international links clearly underscores the importance of global e-science collaborations and the growing dependence on shared cyberinfrastructure resources for complex problem solving," said Tom DeFanti, the principal investigator for the NSF-supported StarLight optical Internet exchange in Chicago, where TransPAC connects in North America.

For the past five years, the TransPAC consortium has connected research and education networks in the Asia-Pacific associated with the Asia-Pacific Advanced Network (APAN) to the Internet2 Abilene network, the vBNS, U.S. federal networks, and other global international research and education networks. Operational support for TransPAC is provided in the United States by IU's Global Research Network Operations Center and in Japan by KDDI Corp.'s APAN network operations center. International circuits for TransPAC are provided by KDDI Corp.

In 1998, NSF awarded $10 million over five years to fund TransPAC. The Japan Science and Technology Corp. in 1999 awarded $10 million over five years to double the capacity of TransPAC. In 2002, TransPAC increased bandwidth available for researchers from 155Mbps (megabits per second) to 1.244Gbps (gigabits per second). The funding extension by NSF provides $1.75 million over the next year for continued operational support. In the coming year, plans include increasing TransPAC bandwidth capacity at no increase in cost from the current 1.244Gbps to 5Gbps, more than quadrupling capacity for researchers.

http://www.transpac.org/

http://globalnoc.iu.edu/

http://www.startap.net/starlight/



 
Indiana University
IU Home Pages
400 E. 7th Street. Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: (812) 855-6494

Publication date: July 18, 2003
Comments: homepgs@indiana.edu
Copyright 2000, The Trustees of Indiana University