Four of Europe's biggest radio astronomy facilities are to be connected using
high-bandwidth point-to-point circuits through the European Union's
Express
Production Real-time eVLBI Service (EXPReS) project.
EXPReS aims to establish 1Gbps point-to-point network connections between the
central supercomputer and each of the partner telescopes across Europe's
Geant2
network.
This network connects over 30 million European research and education users
in 34 countries across the continent.
The four telescopes are located in Medicina in Italy, Torun in Poland, and
Jodrell Bank and Cambridge in the UK. Being connected via Geant2 allows them to
work together simultaneously and create, in effect, a single telescope as large
as Europe.
"The EXPReS project has huge potential. By creating an internationally
distributed electronic Very Long Baseline Interferometer we will be able to
chart evidence of previously unseen astronomical events," said Dr Huib Jan van
Langevelde, coordinator for the EXPReS project.
This will give astronomers the ability to track transient and short-lived
events right at the edge of the known universe, helping astronomers to get a
more complete view of the cosmos.
Astronomers hope that the project will enable real-time "rapid response,
target of opportunity" science which will allow researchers to react quickly to
unexpected events, such as supernovae explosions and gamma-ray bursts.
Led by the
Joint
Institute for VLBI in Europe (Jive), the project will expand to link radio
astronomy institutes from across Europe, Asia, Australia, South America, South
Africa and the US.
Jive is among the first to deploy the point-to-point services on the
European-wide Geant2 network, and plans to connect up to 16 of the most
sensitive radio telescopes around the world.
The use of point-to-point circuits will guarantee the bandwidth and quality
of connections between users.
Geant2 infrastructure is built, planned and managed by the
Dante
research networking organisation.
"Geant2 provides connectivity for a variety of projects, supporting research
innovation right across the globe," said Dai Davies, general manager of Dante.
"Its point-to-point connectivity allows dedicated, high speed data transfer
and the benefits it brings are available to a variety of education and science
research projects.
"The astronomy network created through the EXPReS project is particularly
impressive in its size and geographic scope."
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