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Calit2: The Path Forward
Environmental Technical Working Group
Environmental Technical Working Group Kick-Off
September 25, 2009
Dr. Larry Smarr
Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and
Information Technology
Harry E. Gruber Professor,
Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering
Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD
Today’s Meeting Agenda
•
10:00-10:30 Roundtable Introductions
– Who Are You, What Do You Do, How Does it Relate to Environmental thrust.
– Each person limited to 1 minutes!
•
10:30-11:00 Planning Process Overview
– Overview of Strategic Planning Process, Desired Output, Timeline
– Questions and Answers on Process
•
11:00-11:45 Technical Brainstorming [Initial Discussion]
– What are the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities for Calit2 in Env?
– What are the application opportunities in this thrust in next 5-10 years?
– What technologies are needed to realize the application opportunities?
•
11:45-12:00 Leadership of Technical Working Group
– Nominations/Volunteer for leadership of TWG
– Decisions on leadership will be made after the meeting and communicated to the
working group prior to the next meeting.
Calit2 Continues to Pursue
Its Initial Mission:
Envisioning How the Extension of Innovative
Telecommunications and Information Technologies
Throughout the Physical World
will Transform Critical Applications
Important to the California Economy and
its Citizens’ Quality Of Life.
Calit2 is a University of California
“Institutional Innovation” Experiment on How to Invent
a Persistent Collaborative Research and Education
Environment that Provides Insight into How the UC,
a Major Research University, Might Evolve in the Future.
Calit2 Review Report: p.1
Calit2 Must Update Its Vision for the Next Decade
and Answer the President’s Call
“We need to do a better job of
telling our story in Sacramento
— and beyond. I've made
some 20 trips to the capital
in the past year and
will continue my advocacy.
But frankly, I could use
some help.”
--UC President Yudof
The Components on Which Calit2
Can Build the Next 5-10 Years
Principles for Developing the Path Forward
•
Responsive to LARGE-SCALE SOCIETAL CHALLENGES in California and
Beyond
•
Articulates a Clear Five-Ten Year Vision of Significant Scientific or Technical
Challenges
•
Builds on Strength of Both Campuses and Expands as Needed to External
Partners (Other Universities, National Laboratories, Etc)
•
Engages Existing Centers, Large Grants, & Large Scale Calit2 Infrastructure
•
Anchored in One Application Area, but Draws from The Institute’s Other
Seven Application and Enabling Technologies
•
Creates “At Scale” Living Laboratory Prototype that Demonstrates the
Feasibility of Addressing the CHALLENGE
Visual Timeline for Developing
The Path Forward
Campus Working Group Meetings
October-November 2009
Mon
Mon
Planning and Kick-Off
September 2009
Tues Wed Thur
31
SEPT
1
2
3
4
*7
8 ALL
HAND
S
9
10
11
15
16
14
17
Wed
Thur
21
22
23
24
28
29
30
OCT
5
Fri
Tues
6
7
Review of Technical Input
December 2009
Fri
25
TWGENV
1
8
2
TWGHEALTH
Mon
Tues
13
TWGENERGY
14
15
16
19
20
TWGCULTURE
21
22 2nd
ALL
HANDS
23
26
27
28
29
30
NOV 2
3
4
5
6
9
10
*11
12
13
18
16
17
18
19
20
23
24
25
*26
*27
30
Dec
2
3
4
7
8
9
10
Target for Reverse Town Hall
11
14
15
16
17
18
*21
*22
*23
*24
*25
*28
*29
*30
*31
JAN
*1
Fri
Review Cycle
January 2010
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thur
JAN 4
5
6
7
8
11
12
13
14
15
DOC
*18
19
Fri
20
21
22
CALit 2 DiV Councils
25
A total of 48 working days for Technical
Working Group Activities
Thur
9
12
1
Wed
26
27
28
CALIT2 Gov & AB COUNCIL
29
What Output Do We Want for the TWG?
•
Technical White Paper of Calit2 Opportunities in Environment
– Maximum of 10 pages, high level vision, major stakeholders, needed
technologies, Calit2 unique efforts, gap analysis (what do we have, what do we
need to realize vision).
•
Executive Summary of Technical White Paper for Path Forward Document
– Maximum of 3 pages, summarizes details of more technical oriented white paper.
•
Strength, Weakness, Opportunities, Threats, Gap Analysis
– Maximum 2 page document that summarizes SWOT and Gap conversation.
– SWOT’s will be kept internal, not shared in public document.
The Digital Transformation of
Environment
• Water, Fire, & Changing California Climate
– Global Climate Change Drives Regional Climate Disruption
– Common “Mirror World” of Southern California for Fire and
Water Management
– 3D Detailed Natural and Human Modified Environment
– Wide-Spread Sensor Nets
– Emergency Response to Disasters
– Policy and Decision Support Tools
Climate Change Will Pose Major Challenges to California
in Water and Wildfires
“It is likely that the changes in climate that San Diego is experiencing due to the warming
of the region will increase the frequency and intensity of fires even more, making the
region more vulnerable to devastating fires like the ones seen in 2003 and 2007.”
California Applications Program (CAP) & The California Climate Change Center (CCCC)
CAP/CCCC is directed from the Climate Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Assessment Science Mtg, SIO 4/20/2009
Climate and Sea Level Scenarios
for California: 2008-2009 State Assessment
Dan Cayan SIO and USGS
Alan Sanstadt LLNL
Mary Tyree SIO
Ed Maurer Santa Clara University
Mike Dettinger USGS, SIO
Hugo Hidalgo Univ. Costa Rica
Tapash Das
SIO
Nick Graham HRC, SIO
Peter Bromirski SIO
Reinhard Flick Calif Boating and Waterways,
SIO
sponsors:
California Energy Commission PIER program
California Ocean Protection Council
NOAA OGP RISA element
http://meteora.ucsd.edu/cap
Creating a Proposal
Addressing a Major Challenge to California
UCSD
LANL
UCI
UCSB
Creating a Digital Model of Southern California
and Coupled Codes to Simulate Wildfires
Start with Sophisticated Los Alamos Wildfire Simulator
Rodman Linn, Los Alamos
Coupling FIRETEC/HIGRAD
to the Rest of the Environment
UCSB
UCI
UCI
LANL
1/3 Billion Pixel OptIPortal Linked to NASA Goddard
Earth Satellite Images of October 2007 Wildfires
Source: Falko Kuester, Calit2@UCSD
HPWREN Topology, August 2008
WIDC
PSAP
KYVW
COTD
KNW
B08
1
BDC
PFO
GVDA
Santa
WMC
Rosa
RDM
AZRY
BZN
CRY
SND
KSW
FRD
SMER
DHL
SO
P474
SLMS
MPO
Hans-Werner Braun,
HPWREN PI
LVA2
BVDA
SCS
GLRS
P478
P486
MTGY MVFD
P510
P483
RMNA
DSME
CRRS
WLA
GMPK
USGC
CWC
P506
P499
P480
P509
CE
MONP
UCSD
70+ miles
to SCI
DESC
P497
MLO
P494
P473
IID2
SDSU
P500
CNM
FDX PL6
155Mbps
GHz FCC licensed
155Mbps FDX 11 GHz FCC licensed
NSS
to CI and
45Mbps
FDX 6 GHz FCC licensed
S
PEMEXFDX 11 GHz FCC licensed
45Mbps
45Mbps FDX 5.8 GHz unlicensed
45Mbps-class HDX 4.9GHz
45Mbps-class HDX 5.8GHz unlicensed
~8Mbps HDX 2.4/5.8 GHz unlicensed
~3Mbps HDX 2.4 GHz unlicensed
115kbps HDX 900 MHz unlicensed
56kbps via RCS network
dashed = planned
POTR
P066
approximately 50 miles:
Backbone/relay node
Astronomy science site
Biology science site
Earth science site
University site
Researcher location
Native American site
First Responder site
Firefighters from the Sky
Ron Serabia
Fire Captain
Semi-Retired
Talk to Ron
in the
Calit2 Theatre
Calit2 Added Live Feeds From HPWREN Cameras to
KPBS Google Map