Title: NOAAPort Expansion
1NOAAPort Expansion
- Philip Cragg
- NWS/Systems Engineering Center
- 1-13-05
2Requirement
- Deliver the ever increasing data volume to the
field. - Data delivery requirements to the field are
expected to increase by 10 fold by 2010. - A scalable delivery method is needed to keep up
with the demand. - An open standard solution will allow procurement
of COTS equipment.
3The Plan
- Use Digital Video Broadcast Satellite (DVB-S)
technology to deliver high volumes of data to the
field. - Use data compression to free up a NOAAPort T-1
channel (complete 8-20-03). - Use freed up T-1 to introduce DVB-S technology
system wide, creating the NWSTG2 channel
(complete 5-28-04). - Add CONUS/DGEX grids (complete 6-14-04) and
Eta12-Grid218 (tentative completion 6-29-04) to
the NWSTG2 channel in GRIB2/JPEG2000 format. - Convert the existing 31/2 T1 channels into a
single, linearly scalable channel (tentative
completion Feb, 2005).
4Benefits of DVB-S
- Current NOAAPort technology requires deployment
of a new proprietary demodulator to the field for
every T1 (1.5 Mbits/sec) increase in data
capacity. - New DVB-S technology is linearly scalable to meet
data requirement demands using a single
demodulator up to 43 Mbits/s per demodulator (vs.
28 T-1 demodulators). - DVB-S technology is a one channel solution.
- The inherently bursty data of NOAAPort is
transmitted much more efficiently over a single
channel, as opposed to discrete T1 channels. - DVB-S technology is open source, and open
standard. - Interoperability and competition among vendors.
- A DVB-S demodulator is a fraction of the cost of
the existing proprietary NOAAPort demodulators.
5NOAAPorts Future
- After the DVB-S technology is proven, NOAAPort
will become a single channel carrying all
NOAAPort data using DVB-S. - Data requirements will be evaluated yearly and
the NOAAPort channel will be scaled accordingly.
6Migration to high capacity, single DVB-S NOAAPort
channel
GOES WEST 1.544 Mbits/sec
GOES EAST 1.544 Mbits/sec
OCONUS 772Kbps
TG 1.544 Mbits/sec
Past NOAAPort Configuration Through 8-5-03
Past NOAAPort Configuration.
Compressed GOES WEST 1.544 Mbits/sec
Compressed GOES EAST 1.544 Mbits/sec
OCONUS 772Kbps
TG 1.544 Mbits/sec
NOAAPort configuration from 8-5-03 through 8-12-3
NOAAPort configuration after compressing GOES
feeds.
Combined GOES 1.544 Mbits/sec
Combined GOES 1.544 Mbits/sec
OCONUS 772Kbps
TG 1.544 Mbits/sec
NOAAPort configuration from 8-12-03 through
8-19-03
NOAAPort configuration after combining GOES feeds.
Combined GOES 1.544 Mbits/sec
OCONUS 772Kbps
TG 1.544 Mbits/sec
DVB-S Test Signals 1.544 Mbits/sec
NOAAPort configuration From 8-20-03 through
6-13-04
NOAAPort configuration transmitting test DVB-S
signals On the former GOES West channel.
7Migration to high capacity, single DVB-S NOAAPort
channel
8NEW NOAAPort Channel Characteristics
- Satellite AMC-4
- Transponder 13C
- Downlink center frequency 3,956.5 MHz
- Symbol Rate 6.349422 Msymbols/sec
- Data Rate 10.24 Mbits/sec
- Occupied bandwidth 8.6 MHz
- Modulation QPSK 7/8 rate
9Transition to Grid Compression on NOAAPORT
- Spans T1 and DVB-S NOAAPort technologies.
- Compression at source (NCEP).
- Transition period to include dual support (for
both GRIB1 and GRIB2(JPEG2000)). - Cost of additional compress/decompress
processing time outweighed by freed NOAAPort
bandwidth. - Freed bandwidth allows addition of newer and
higher resolution model grids (e.g., 12km Eta
and full GFS support) and other products.