Difference between revisions of "NASA ROSES 2009 ACCESS RFP"
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− | Over the past two years, the GEOSS Architecture Implementation Pilot (AIP) has collaboratively created the common infrastructure elements of data, services, and standards registries, clearinghouses for harvesting metadata and providing API metadata search interfaces, and portals that provide graphical user interfaces (GUI) to the clearinghouses. As part of this Pilot process, the ESIP Air Quality Workgroup has improved the metadata associated with a given data access service. The structured part of the metadata is stored in the Air Quality Community Catalog. The Air Quality community portal facilitates service registration for air quality service providers and allows service users to connect to the with and use the GEOSS infrastructure, which in turn allows sharing of data, tools and information and leads to better air quality decision-support. | + | Over the past two years, the GEOSS Architecture Implementation Pilot (AIP) has collaboratively created the common infrastructure elements of data, services, and standards registries, clearinghouses for harvesting metadata and providing API metadata search interfaces, and portals that provide graphical user interfaces (GUI) to the clearinghouses. As part of this Pilot process, the ESIP Air Quality Workgroup has improved the metadata associated with a given data access service as well as developed and implemented an Air Quality Community Catalog an Portal. The structured part of the metadata is stored in the Air Quality Community Catalog. The Air Quality community portal facilitates service registration for air quality service providers and allows service users to connect to the with and use the GEOSS infrastructure, which in turn allows sharing of data, tools and information and leads to better air quality decision-support. |
With the foundational elements in a fairly stable prototype form, we are proposing collaborative work across the air quality community in using and refining these components to achieve operational user access to web services and service registries within an air quality context. The proposed project will advance, from an air quality science and applications perspective, previous efforts in the Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) Common Infrastructure and Air Quality Community Infrastructure by connecting users to standards-based interfaces for registering, finding and binding to earth science web services. The value of this proposal is that while these tools and methods are developed for the air quality community, because they are standards based, they can be reused for other ESIP and GEOSS Societal Benefit Area Communities (i.e. disaster management, health, water quality) | With the foundational elements in a fairly stable prototype form, we are proposing collaborative work across the air quality community in using and refining these components to achieve operational user access to web services and service registries within an air quality context. The proposed project will advance, from an air quality science and applications perspective, previous efforts in the Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) Common Infrastructure and Air Quality Community Infrastructure by connecting users to standards-based interfaces for registering, finding and binding to earth science web services. The value of this proposal is that while these tools and methods are developed for the air quality community, because they are standards based, they can be reused for other ESIP and GEOSS Societal Benefit Area Communities (i.e. disaster management, health, water quality) |
Revision as of 11:10, April 1, 2009
The NASA (ACCESS) Program is seeking proposals that address earth science user access to distributed web services and service registries.
NASA Advancing Collaborative Connections for Earth System Science(ACCESS) Program
- Increase the interconnectedness and reuse of IT software, techniques, and services for Earth Science
- Supports capabilities for freer movement of data and information in distributed environments
NASA 2009 ROSES Call for Proposals: ACCESS solicitation
- Registering and finding NASA data and services: methods, tools and facilities
- Data quality, usability, and legacy: methods, tools and facilities
Relevant point from the RFP
2.1 Additional Proposal Requirements
- Serving research and applied science, teams must include IT & ES experts.
- Tied to ES research issue(s)
- Identify ES focus area and/or the application to be served by IT
- Two year award.
- Id current tech state and improvements
- Relevancy of existing, ongoing work
- Provide an operations concept for continuance of the tools and services
2.2 Participation in Earth Science Data System Working Groups, required.
2.3 Persistence of ACCESS Tools and Services. ACCESS for development, not for maintainance! Have to address maintainance and life cycle in the proposal.
3. Education and Public Outreach Opportunities, strongly encourages supplemental Edu/Outreach supplement address the tool or service life cycle and means for continued operation once ACCESS deployment resources end.
3. Education and Public Outreach Opportunities NASA policy strongly encourages participation in Education and Public Outreach (E/PO) activities by members of the science community. You may be eligible to propose a supplemental Education or Outreach effort if your research proposal is selected for award.
ESIP NOI for ACCESS Proposal
Details on NOI Pg. 38 of NASA Proposers Handbook
Short Title (50 Char)
Sharing, Finding and Using Air Quality Services
Long Title (254 Char)
Sharing, Finding and Using Distributed Air Quality Services: Improving the Use of Satellite, Aerial, Surface and Modeling Data and Tools within the Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS)
Brief Description
Over the past two years, the GEOSS Architecture Implementation Pilot (AIP) has collaboratively created the common infrastructure elements of data, services, and standards registries, clearinghouses for harvesting metadata and providing API metadata search interfaces, and portals that provide graphical user interfaces (GUI) to the clearinghouses. As part of this Pilot process, the ESIP Air Quality Workgroup has improved the metadata associated with a given data access service as well as developed and implemented an Air Quality Community Catalog an Portal. The structured part of the metadata is stored in the Air Quality Community Catalog. The Air Quality community portal facilitates service registration for air quality service providers and allows service users to connect to the with and use the GEOSS infrastructure, which in turn allows sharing of data, tools and information and leads to better air quality decision-support.
With the foundational elements in a fairly stable prototype form, we are proposing collaborative work across the air quality community in using and refining these components to achieve operational user access to web services and service registries within an air quality context. The proposed project will advance, from an air quality science and applications perspective, previous efforts in the Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) Common Infrastructure and Air Quality Community Infrastructure by connecting users to standards-based interfaces for registering, finding and binding to earth science web services. The value of this proposal is that while these tools and methods are developed for the air quality community, because they are standards based, they can be reused for other ESIP and GEOSS Societal Benefit Area Communities (i.e. disaster management, health, water quality)
The Federation for Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) will serve as project PI, leveraging its collaboration framework that is already being used by a core group within the air quality community as well as its coordinated development of the GEOSS Air Quality Community catalog and portals. Collaborators will include university, government, and industry partners participating in the GEOSS AIP. The collaborators will range from air quality data providers (including NASA satellite derived products, aerial products, and surface based monitoring), to air quality modelers and researchers, to air quality application developers, to air quality managers. Each user type has distinct interests and uses for GEOSS that need to be considered in achieving a successful operational system for sharing, finding and using distributed data and tools.
By the summer of 2009, the GEOSS components will be considered to be at a TRL of 7 as they will have been tested and demonstrated in an operational environment and available in an publicly available and semi-operational system. The proposed work will raise the TRL level by integrating and transferring technology into operational air quality information systems and research and application systems. It is anticipated that ESIP's coordination of the project will leverage ESIP's partnerships with other government agencies in developing an plan to sustain and persist the system.
Names of Co-Is and Collaborators
To be added.
Possible ESIP AQ Response to ACCESS CFP
Through its contributions to the GEOSS AIP, the ESIP Air Quality Workgroup appears to be in a position to submit a response. ESIP has been actively involved in the creation of the air quality community catalog and portal and their connection with the GEOSS Common Infrastructure (including the GEOSS Clearninghouses and GEOSS Registry) in providing standards-based interfaces for registering and finding data services. As the catalog, portal and overall ‘publish and find’ processes become more stable, one of the next steps is to solidify the process of ‘binding’ to and using the services.
ESIP’s investment in the AIP combined with the leveraging of Air Quality Workgroup participants own projects in creating and maintaining the air quality community components of the GEOSS AIP provides a foundation on which to address the ACCESS Program objectives. An ACCESS Program project could be an opportunity for support to enhance the community infrastructure and improve its value (aka use) and persistence by applying it to the air quality community’s activities in research, applied science and management.
The includes the following:
“Improving Earth science user access to web services and service registries: Users searching and using NASA Earth science data systems often do not have broad knowledge of services that may be available pertinent to their data of interest. Many web-based services have been created that are of direct applicability to Earth science research and applied science uses. Many of these services, however, are not easily discoverable or are exposed through very limited access points.
The ACCESS program seeks proposals that address this information gap by providing the means for users to discover and use services being made available by NASA, other Federal agencies, academia, the private sector, and others. Proposals should detail how existing services will be discovered by users and what other available data system components will be used to bolster the persistent availability of these services in both a traditional user interactive GUI interface or those using a machine-to-machine interface.”
Workgroupd Discussion Items
- Should the ESIP Air Quality Workgroup lead a proposal in response to the ACCESS solicitation?
- If so, which of the two topics: Publish-Find Services or Metadata
Schedule
- Letter of Intent due April 1.
- Proposal, June 2009