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100-Gigabit Connectivity to Pacific Wave International Peering Exchange for ESnet

Pacific Wave announced the completion of a 100-Gigabit connection for the Energy Sciences Network (ESnet), the high-speed computer network serving US Department of Energy (DOE) laboratories and scientific facilities.  With the completion of this new connection in Sunnyvale, CA, ESnet has upgraded its peering capabilities to research networks in 40 countries throughout the Pacific Rim and beyond.

"International exchange points such as Pacific Wave serve a critical role in the architecture of the Internet, and they are especially important in supporting large-scale scientific collaboration," stated ESnet Division Director Greg Bell. "This new 100-Gigabit connection will improve data mobility for scientists at the cutting edge of discovery in high-energy physics, fusion energy research, climate science, and many other fields."

ESnet provides the high-bandwidth, reliable connections that link scientists at national laboratories, universities and other research institutions, enabling them to collaborate on some of the world's most important scientific challenges including energy, climate science, and the origins of the universe. Funded by the DOE Office of Science, and managed and operated by the ESnet team at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, ESnet provides scientists with access to unique DOE research facilities and computing resources.

"The international advanced network infrastructure that first emerged as an aspiration in the 1990s has become a vital part of 21st century collaborative research in a vast number of disciplines," said CENIC President and CEO Louis Fox. "Ensuring that the research labs and partners served by ESnet enjoy cutting-edge connectivity to colleagues around the world is an equally vital part of maintaining the pace of innovation, as well as the United States' continued position as a global leader in data-intensive research."

"Pacific Wave and ESnet are both cornerstones of international advanced networking," adds Amy Philipson, Executive Director of Pacific Northwest Gigapop. "The better the connectivity between our networks, the more value we bring to our participants and the bigger the positive impact we both have through supporting data-intensive collaborative research into topics of great global importance."

A joint project between the Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California (CENIC) and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP) with support from the University of Southern California and the University of Washington, Pacific Wave is a state-of-the-art international peering exchange designed to serve research and education networks throughout the Pacific Rim and beyond and features connection points at three US West Coast locations: the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, and Seattle.

Over the ten years since its inception, the Pacific Wave international peering exchange has become a critical part of the international advanced network infrastructure and the dominant means by which all of the world's such networks cross the Pacific Ocean.

National Laboratory Enhances Research Network Connections

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - October 30, 2001 - Today the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has expanded its network connectivity by provisioning an OC-3 (155Mbps) circuit into the Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP). This strategic connection will provide direct and efficient high bandwidth access among PNNL and the major research and development entities throughout the Pacific Northwest including the University of Washington, Oregon Health Sciences Center, and the Universities of Alaska, Montana, Idaho, and Montana State.

"The University of Washington is pleased that PNNL will have via the PNWGP a robust, direct connection to support our several major collaborative initiatives," said Scott Mah, Director of Communication Technologies. "Specifically, this connection will be a critical tool used by the UW-PNNL Joint Nanotechnology Institute and the Joint Program in Cell Signaling. The faster and more reliably the researchers can pass their data back and forth, the more quickly research results will be reached and communicated."

"Now, more than ever, high performance network connections are essential tools to the success in our research," says Ray Bair, associate director of Computational Sciences and Mathematics at PNNL. "By allowing information to be transferred more quickly, we believe that the resources available to us through our OC-3 connection to the Pacific Northwest Gigapop will enable PNNL staff to work more closely with our collaborators and provide them with better access to computing and data resources at the lab."

"The Cell Systems Initiative (CSI) of the University of Washington and PNNL have signed an agreement to create a joint program in Cell Signaling. This joint program focuses on providing high bandwidth, online collaboration tools and resources to cell biology researchers nationwide and, by extension, worldwide. The PNNL connection to the Pacific Northwest Gigapop is crucial to the success of this joint program," according to Joseph Duncan, Chief Operations and IT Officer at UW's CSI.

The OC-3 connection also completes a higher speed connection from PNNL to ESnet, the Department of Energy's (DOE) Energy Science Network (ESnet), which has a presence in the Pacific Northwest Gigapop.

"This will be of great value to PNNL's leading edge research for DOE, including the agency's Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing program, the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory and our global climate change research," according to Bair.

About Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is a DOE research facility that delivers breakthrough science and technology in the areas of environment, energy, health, fundamental sciences and national security. Battelle, based in Columbus, Ohio, has operated the laboratory for DOE since 1965. The William R. Wiley Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, located on the PNNL campus in Richland, opened in 1997 and provides the national scientific community access to its advanced research equipment.

About Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP)
Pacific Northwest Gigapop is the Northwest's Next Generation Internet, Internet2/Abilene applications cooperative, testbed, and point of presence. PNWGP connects together high-performance international and federal research networks with universities, research organizations, and leading-edge R&D; and new-media enterprises throughout Washington, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Canada, and now Australia.

About the University of Washington
The University of Washington is one of the world's top research universities. Perennially among the top three American institutions in peer-reviewed research activities and related competitive contracts and grants, and with numerous top-ranked programs, the UW is a university which truly embodies the ideals of "Learning @ the Leading Edge" T. (For more information see www.washington.edu.)

 

Contact info:

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Media inquiries: Staci Maloof
PNNL media relations
509-372-6313
staci.maloof@pnl.gov

Business inquiries: John McCoy, Program Manager
Information Sciences & Engineering
902 Battelle Boulevard
P.O. Box 999
Richland, WA 99352
Tel: 509-372-6156
Email: john.mccoy@pnl.gov
Web: www.pnl.gov

Pacific Northwest Gigapop
Jan Eveleth, Manager
4545 15th Ave. NE
Seattle, WA 98105
Tel: 206-934-5588
Email: info@pnw-gigapop.net
Web: www.pnw-gigapop.net

Amy PhilipsonESnet