NewsUltra high-speed scientific data connection opens between Germany and Poland

Ultra high-speed scientific data connection opens between Germany and Poland

On 12th June Secretary of State Wolf-Dieter Lukas of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, and the Polish Undersecretary of State of the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education Grzegorz Wrochna opened an ultra high-speed connection for the exchange of scientific data between Germany and Poland.

The new connection between European XFEL, DESY and National Center for Nuclear Research (NCBJ) in Otwock-Świerk near Warsaw will be used to analyse data from experiments carried out by international teams of researchers at the world's largest X-ray laser European XFEL.

The first passenger on the new data line was data from the model biomolecule lysozyme, of which 16 million frames of data were collected at European XFEL and analysed in a proof of concept experiment published in 2019. The data will now be analysed again in Poland to test and validate the software and procedures in situ at NCBJ.

X-ray data of molecules enable scientists to determine their three-dimensional structure. Many such images are combined to create molecular movies to investigate extremely fast processes, for example in the human body, in chemical reactions or in materials.

A key limitation to the speed of scientific data analysis is the availability of computing power to process the data. From calibrating datasets to solving structures, huge amounts of CPU time are required. Using two computing centres – at DESY in Hamburg and NCBJ in Świerk – will accelerate the analysis of data generated by experiments at European XFEL.

The ultra high-speed connection means the time required to transfer the data is much shorter than the time saved by accessing more computing power. The new international connection will enable data to travel with a speed up to 100 gigabits per second (Gbit/s) – about 400 times faster than a standard household high-speed internet connection, which can typically manage a download speed of about 250 Mbit/s. It is approximately 100 times faster than the typical internet connections between European XFEL and other research institutes, with the exception of DESY. On a normal connection it would take about a month to transfer the huge amount of data generated by an average experiment at the facility. The new connection will reduce this to just a few hours.

An agreement between European XFEL and NCBJ that paves the way to using NBCJ computing power has been signed between the Managing Directors of the two facilities, Prof. Robert Feidenhans'l and Dr Nicole Elleuche for European XFEL as well as Krzysztof Kurek for NCBJ .

Construction of additional infrastructure to ensure a dedicated high-speed connection began in 2017. In addition to European XFEL and NCBJ, the German National Research and Education Network (DFN), the Supercomputing and Networking Center at the Institute for Bioorganic Chemistry in Poznań (PSNC), the Research and Academic Computer Network National Research Institute (NASK), and Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY) participated in the installation of the new high-speed data connection.

Further Reading

Source: European XFEL via IDW Nachrichten Editor by Mirjam Buse, VDI Technologiezentrum GmbH Countries / organization: Germany Poland Topic: Information and Communications Infrastructure

Promoter

About us