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![]() by Staff Writers Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jan 26, 2023
Remote sensing data reveals the state of our planet and allows us to look into Earth's past: it is an indispensable tool to help us better understand and protect our planet. How can we secure this tool long term while providing continuous access? The European Copernicus Earth observation programme seeks to answer this question. On 24 January 2023, the 'Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem' was presented at the European Space Conference in Brussels. In the coming months, this new data ecosystem will replace all previous channels and make all Copernicus data and data products available via a single platform. The available data services will also be expanded. The German Aerospace Center is part of the European consortium that was recently awarded the contract for this large-scale project. "DLR has conducted extensive work on Big Data platforms from an early stage and this contract demonstrates how pioneering our work has been. Our developments in the long-term archiving of Big Data will continue to drive Earth observation forward in the future," says Stefan Dech, Director of the German Remote Sensing Data Center at DLR's Earth Observation Center (EOC).
Big Data - processing and long-term archiving DLR has been leading the development of this archive since the 1990s. EOC is also implementing a high-performance data analytics platform called 'terrabyte' at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre in Garching. terrabyte makes global Earth observation data from European and national missions available on a high-performance cloud environment for analysis by DLR researchers. In doing so, the teams at EOC have developed cutting-edge expertise in the processing and long-term archiving of large data volumes. Data from the Sentinel satellites have been stored in D-SDA for internal use, including use with terrabyte, since the programme began. The desired data can therefore be downloaded directly from the DLR archive into the Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem. Historical data can also be obtained from the archives of the European Space Agency (ESA). This is where the raw data from the Sentinel missions are stored. EOC, as part of the consortium, ensures that the raw data produced by the Sentinel-1 satellites can be used to create viable products.
Data products on demand The data they produce serve as a basis to better assess the effects of climate change. The products of the Copernicus services will also be available via the shared ecosystem - including those related to the atmosphere, marine environments, land monitoring, climate change, security and disaster and crisis management. In addition, users will be able to process the satellite data directly within the ecosystem without downloading it. Thanks to cloud technologies, users will then be able to create their own maps and data products regardless of their location. The Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem will make these data and products directly and easily available to all interested parties. This applies in particular to public institutions, but researchers, companies and private individuals can also continue to use the services offered by the European Earth Observation Programme - the new web portal is freely accessible at: www.dataspace.copernicus.eu.
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