
Cloud Computing in Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences
- 1st Edition - March 24, 2016
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Editors: Tiffany C Vance, Nazila Merati, Chaowei Yang, May Yuan
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 0 3 1 9 2 - 6
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 0 3 1 9 3 - 3
Cloud Computing in Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences provides the latest information on this relatively new platform for scientific computing, which has great possibilities and chall… Read more

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provides the latest information on this relatively new platform for scientific computing, which has great possibilities and challenges, including pricing and deployments costs and applications that are often presented as primarily business oriented. In addition, scientific users may be very familiar with these types of models and applications, but relatively unfamiliar with the intricacies of the hardware platforms they use.The book provides a range of practical examples of cloud applications that are written to be accessible to practitioners, researchers, and students in affiliated fields. By providing general information on the use of the cloud for oceanographic and atmospheric computing, as well as examples of specific applications, this book encourages and educates potential users of the cloud. The chapters provide an introduction to the practical aspects of deploying in the cloud, also providing examples of workflows and techniques that can be reused in new projects.
- Provides real examples that help new users quickly understand the cloud and provide guidance for new projects
- Presents proof of the usability of the techniques and a clear path to adoption of the techniques by other researchers
- Includes real research and development examples
- that are ideal for cloud computing adopters in ocean and atmospheric domains
Primary: atmospheric scientists, climatologists, meteorologists, oceanographers.
Secondary: geoscientists
- Dedication
- List of Contributors
- Author Biographies
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. A Primer on Cloud Computing
- The Characteristics of Cloud Computing
- Service Models for Cloud Computing
- Types of Clouds
- Science in the Cloud
- Chapter 2. Analysis Patterns for Cloud-Centric Atmospheric and Ocean Research
- Introduction
- What is e-Science?
- e-Science and Cloud Computing
- Pattern Language and Analysis Patterns
- e-Science Analysis Patterns for the Cloud
- Conclusion
- Chapter 3. Forces and Patterns in the Scientific Cloud: Recent History and Beyond
- 2005 to 2015: A Period of Fit and Retrofit
- Forces and Challenges in Scientific Cloud Adoption
- Looking Beyond Fit and Retrofit
- Collaboration and Visualization as Underserved Challenges
- Conclusion
- Chapter 4. Data-Driven Atmospheric Sciences Using Cloud-Based Cyberinfrastructure: Plans, Opportunities, and Challenges for a Real-Time Weather Data Facility
- Science
- Education
- Data
- Campus Information Technology Infrastructure
- Vision for the Future: Moving Unidata’s Services and Software to “the Cloud”
- Categories of Services
- Community Collaboration
- Managing Change for Our Community
- Current Unidata Cloud-related Activities
- Integrated Data Viewer Application-streaming Cloud Servers
- Community Engagement, Education, and Leadership
- Closing Remarks
- Chapter 5. Supporting Marine Sciences With Cloud Services: Technical Feasibility and Challenges
- Introduction
- Bridging Technical Gaps Between Scientific Communities
- Climate Model Output Processing
- Scalable Data Processing: Nuts and Bolts
- Building a Sharable Data-processing Chain
- Conclusion
- Chapter 6. How We Used Cloud Services to Develop a 4D Browser Visualization of Environmental Data at the Met Office Informatics Lab
- Introduction
- The Generic Lab Approach
- The Project: Interactive 4D Browser Visualization of High-Resolution Numerical Weather Prediction Data
- Collaboration and Outreach
- Conclusions and Final Remarks
- Chapter 7. Cloud Computing in Education
- Introduction
- Cloud-Computing Benefits for Education
- Cloud-Computing Challenges for Education
- Sample Cloud Instance
- Chapter 8. Cloud Computing for the Distribution of Numerical Weather Prediction Outputs
- Introduction
- Pushing Large Quantities of Data to the Cloud Under Time Constraints
- Making a Multi-PB Dataset Available in the Cloud
- Private Cloud
- Conclusion
- Chapter 9. A2CI: A Cloud-Based, Service-Oriented Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure to Support Atmospheric Research
- Introduction
- Literature Review
- Cloud-Based CI Framework for Atmospheric Research
- Components
- 2D Visualization Service
- 3D Visualization Service
- Graphical User Interface of A2CI
- Conclusion and Discussion
- Chapter 10. Polar CI Portal: A Cloud-Based Polar Resource Discovery Engine
- Background and Challenges
- System Architecture
- Implementation and Methodology
- Status
- Conclusions and Discussion
- Chapter 11. Climate Analytics as a Service
- Introduction
- An Architectural Framework for Climate Analytics as a Service
- Climate Analytics as a Service Reduced to Practice: The MERRA Analytic Service and the MERRA Persistence Service
- The Climate Data Services Application Programming Interface
- Implications and Vision for the Future
- Conclusions
- Chapter 12. Using Cloud-Based Analytics to Save Lives
- Introduction
- Background
- Cloud Computing: Enabling Public, Private, and Academic Partnerships
- Cloud Computing-Enabled Partnerships Example: The National Flood Interoperability Experiment
- Cloud Computing and Big Data: Made for Each Other
- Cloud Computing, Big Data, and High Processing: Meaningful Insight
- Cloud Computing, Big Data, and Machine Learning
- NFIE Analytics With Microsoft Azure
- Benefits and Summary
- Conclusions
- Chapter 13. Hadoop in the Cloud to Analyze Climate Datasets
- Introduction
- Challenges
- Hadoop for Large-scale Datasets
- Analysis of Climate Datasets
- Distributed Processing of Gridded Data
- Distributed Processing of Satellite Imagery
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Chapter 14. LiveOcean
- Introduction
- LiveOcean Project Motivation
- Past Work: ROMS Validation
- LiveOcean Technical Components
- Further Scenarios for LiveOcean Use
- Conclusions
- Chapter 15. Usage of Social Media and Cloud Computing During Natural Hazards
- Introduction
- Social Media for Disaster Management
- Cloud Computing to Facilitate Disaster Management
- Case Studies
- Conclusions
- Chapter 16. Dubai Operational Forecasting System in Amazon Cloud
- Introduction
- Operational Forecasting System Overview
- System Architecture
- Cloud Implementation
- Results of the Cloud Implementation
- Ongoing and Future System Development
- Conclusion
- Chapter 17. Utilizing Cloud Computing to Support Scalable Atmospheric Modeling: A Case Study of Cloud-Enabled ModelE
- Atmospheric Modeling: An Overview
- Computing Solutions for Atmospheric Modeling
- Building Cloud Infrastructure for Scenario-Based Atmospheric Modeling
- Case Study: ModelE
- Discussion and Conclusion
- Chapter 18. ERMA® to the Cloud
- Introduction
- The Process of Moving to the Cloud
- Security Considerations
- Contracting, Procurement, and Planning
- System Design
- Project Management
- Lessons Learned
- Chapter 19. A Distributed, RESTful Data Service in the Cloud in a Federal Environment—A Cautionary Tale
- Introduction
- Environmental Research Division’s Data Access Program
- Why a Federal (or Other Governmental) Setting Matters
- Conclusion
- Chapter 20. Conclusion and the Road Ahead
- Index
- Edition: 1
- Published: March 24, 2016
- No. of pages (Paperback): 454
- No. of pages (eBook): 454
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN: 9780128031926
- eBook ISBN: 9780128031933
TV
Tiffany C Vance
NM
Nazila Merati
CY
Chaowei Yang
MY