
NASA’s Earth
Observing System Data and Information System
(EOSDIS) acquires, archives, and manages data from
all
of NASA’s
Earth science satellites, for the benefit of
the Space Agency and for the benefit of others,
including
local governments, first responders, the
commercial remote
sensing industry, teachers, museums, and the
general public.
EOSDIS is currently handling an extraordinary
amount of
NASA scientific data. To give an idea of the
volume of
information it receives, NASA’s Terra Earth-observing
satellite, just one of many NASA satellites
sending down
data, sends it hundreds of gigabytes a day,
almost as
much data as the Hubble
Space Telescope acquires in an
entire year, or about equal to the amount of
information
that could be found in hundreds of pickup trucks
filled
with books.
To make EOSDIS data completely accessible to the
Earth
science community, NASA teamed up with private
industry
in 2000 to develop an Earth science “marketplace”
registry
that lets public users quickly drill down to the
exact
information they need. It also enables them to
publish
their research and resources alongside of NASA’s
research
and resources. This registry is known as the Earth
Observing System ClearingHOuse, or ECHO.
The charter for this project focused on having an
infrastructure
completely independent from EOSDIS that would
allow for
more contributors and open up additional data
access options.
Accordingly, it is only fitting that the term
ECHO is
more than just an acronym; it represents the
functionality
of the system in that it can echo out and create
interoperability
among other systems, all while maturing with time
as industry
technologies and standards change and improve.
Version 8.0 provides a mechanism of interoperability between
organizations who offer Earth observation data
and independent
organizations who offer tools, algorithms, and
models
that utilize this data, essentially serving as
“middleware”
between data and client partners. With this
feature, Earth
scientists have a basic infrastructure to
leverage resources
from global partners and, hence, build dynamic
applications.
“The future of a global exchange of
Earth-observing resources
allows for effective use of the resources for
current
science applications and enables future
innovation in
putting together these data, algorithms, models,
and other
services in new and unintended ways,” said
Pearson Blueprint
Technologies’ Michael Burnett, the lead ECHO
architect.
“ECHO is built as infrastructure for a
service-oriented
enterprise, the future of enterprise-level
exchange in
many domains, including that of Earth
observation.”
In order to retrieve data stored in ECHO, a user
can search
for specific metadata using keywords or certain
spatial
or temporal parameters. In performing a spatial
search,
for instance, a user can enter geographic
parameters,
such as the name of a state or an exact
latitudinal/longitudinal
location. The search will then generate a set of
results
for access within the user’s application.
Because ECHO is a Web-brokering system, the user
can order
information in a manner similar to how he or she
would
go about purchasing items from traditional online
retailers.
The user can simply add any data items of
interest to
a personal online shopping cart and then proceed
to checkout.
If the data items retrieved by the ECHO-generated
report
are not of any interest to the user, he or she
can then
initiate a new search based on new keywords or
parameters.
With Web-based services continuing to expand and
reaching
new users as a result, the developers of ECHO
anticipate
that publicly available Earth science data will
proliferate
for tomorrow’s Earth science generation, all
because of
the synergy between today’s data contributors and
customers.