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28 June 2021 to 02 July 2021

 

Aims and scope of the Data-intensive radio astronomy: bringing astrophysics to the exabyte era session

In the advent of all-Sky radio observations, having efficient tools and methods to manage the large-data volume generated is imperative. Although astrophysics is tackling these issues through innovation and expertise in research, and large-data management has been the topic of discussion within the community for decades, with improved interferometers (unprecedented sensitivity and resolution, number of baselines, broad-band receivers), the challenges still remain and are enhanced. Thus the community is actively searching for efficient solutions which will take astrophysics to the exabyte era. Current radio telescopes (e.g. LOFAR, MeerKAT, ASKAP) have identified the difficulties of obtaining hundreds of Gbits/sec of data and processing them through pipelines in order to produce science ready products, as well as providing efficient methods to the community to recover these data, and having efficient data storage for archiving.

Our main aim is to bring together different communities (e.g. astrophysics, high-energy physics, research institutes, industry) to discuss current tools and ideas for the future development of data management. This meeting will enhance our knowledge-bank through various different approaches to tackle the challenges that current and future (SKA) radio telescopes are facing.
 

Programme

  • Data-intensive radio astronomy, current facilities and challenges
  • Data science and the exa-scale era: technical solutions
  • Data science and the exa-scale era: applications and challenges outside astronomy

 

Invited speakers

  • Prof. Russ Taylor (UCT/UWC/IDIA)
  • Dr. Minh Huynh (CASS, Kensington WA)
  • Dr. Katrin Heitmann (Argonne National Laboratory)
  • Prof. Ian Bird (Cern)

 

Scientific organisers

Chair - Eleni Vardoulaki (TLS, Germany); co-chair - Marta Dembska (DLR, Germany); co-chair - Alexander Drabent (TLS, Germany); Mattia Vaccari (UWC; South Africa); Roberto Pizzo (ASTRON, Netherlands); Hans Rainer-Kloeckner (MPIfR, Germany); Giuliano Taffoni (INAF, Italy); Matthias Hoeft (TLS, Germany)

 

Presentations