Space Travel News  
Europe's GEANT computer network extends its reach

by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Feb 29, 2008
The world's highest-speed computer network, Europe's GEANT, is linking up with others worldwide to create a global research network, the European Commission announced Friday.

GEANT, the world's largest computer network dedicated to research and education, already links researchers from Reykjavik to Vladivostok.

Now high-sepeed links will be established with similar research systems in Asia, Latin America and southern Africa, as well as the Balkans, the Black Sea and Mediterranean regions, with help from European funding, the EU's executive arm said.

"With GEANT's massive data processing capacity, Europe can now bring together the best minds in the world to tackle the challenges that we all face," enthused EU Information and Media Commissioner Viviane Reding.

GEANT was launched in 2000 and is jointly funded by Brussels and participating nations.

The commission also announced a further 90 million euros (136 million dollars) in funding for the project up to 2012.

The network already boasts a total of 50,000 kilometres of super-fast 'dark' fibre-optic connections linked to hybrid networking technology, allowing for 320 gigabits of information to stream through per second.

It serves some 30 million users in over 3,500 universities and research centres and connects 34 national research networks.

In a statement, the commission praised the GEANT project as providing "huge technological advances for big science," including EXPReS, an EU radio astronomy project which links the world's largest radio telescopes in China, Europe, South Africa and Chile to a supercomputer in the Netherlands which produces real-time imaging.

Related Links
Space Technology News - Applications and Research



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Game consoles can model black holes, drug molecules
Paris (AFP) Feb 13, 2008
Researchers are cannibalising the Sony PlayStation 3 console and other gaming hardware, turning them into low-cost supercomputers to model pharmaceutical molecules and black holes, the weekly New Scientist says.







  • Space X Falcon 9 Facing More Delays As Shuttle Replacement Looms
  • SpaceX Completes Qualification Testing Of Falcon 1 Merlin Regeneratively Cooled Engine
  • First Firing Of European Staged-Combustion Demonstration Engine
  • Iran gives details on controversial space launch

  • ILS To Launch Two SIRIUS Radio Satellite On Proton Breeze M
  • Ariane 5 Star One C2 Satellite Launch Campaign Underway
  • ILS Announces Contract To Launch Two Sirius Satellite Radio Spacecraft On Proton Breeze M
  • Arianespace Prepares For Its First Two Ariane 5 Missions Of 2008

  • Shuttle Endeavour Set For March 11 Launch Of Japanese Station Module
  • Tunnels Of Activity Beneath The Shuttle Launch Pad
  • NASA Issues Draft Report On Environmental Issues To Wind Up Shuttle Program
  • US space shuttle Atlantis returns home

  • Space Station Orbit Raised Five Clicks
  • Europe Sets A Course For The ISS
  • Unique Three-Way Partnership For ATV Ground Control
  • Joint ESA And Russian Team In Moscow Ready To Support Jules Verne

  • Faster Than A Speeding Bullet: Why We Track The Trash
  • Jules Verne ATV Atop Launcher
  • NASA adds technologies Web feature
  • Killer Electrons Surf Celestial Tsunamis

  • Breaking The Silence On Shenzhou
  • China's New Carrier Rocket To Debut In 2014
  • China plans first spacewalk in 2008
  • China To Carry Out First Spacewalk In Late 2008

  • Coming soon to Japan: remote control with a wink
  • Japanese cellphones to turn into 'robot' buddies
  • Killer Military Robots Pose Latest Threat To Humanity
  • Robot Plumbs Wisconsin Lake On Way To Antarctica, Jovian Moon

  • Tenacious Spirit Might See Rover Through Martian Winter
  • New Tool Enlisted In The Search For Life On Mars
  • NASA Spacecraft Photographs Avalanches On Mars
  • Liquid Water Found Flowing On Mars - Not Yet

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement