Large-scale science instruments, such as the distributed radio telescope LOFAR, show that we are in an era of data-intensive scientific discovery. Such instruments rely critically on significant computing resources, both hardware and software, to do science. Considering limited science budgets, and the small fraction of these that can be dedicated to compute hardware and software, there is a strong and obvious desire for low-cost computing. However, optimising for cost is only part of the equation; the value potential over the lifetime of the solution should also be taken into account. Using a tangible example, compute hardware, we introduce a conceptual model to approximate the lifetime relative science value of such a system. While the in...
Upcoming and future astronomy research facilities will systematically generate terabyte-sized data s...
The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be the largest radio telescope in the world, with an aperture ...
LOFAR is the first of a new generation of radio telescopes. Rather than using expensive dishes, it f...
Large-scale science instruments, such as the distributed radio telescope LOFAR, show that we are in ...
Large-scale science instruments, such as the LHC and recent distributed radio telescopes such as LOF...
Traditional radio astronomy instrumentation relies on custom built designs, specialized for each sci...
The deeper we look into the universe, the closer we get to its origin. This fact triggers astronomer...
For next-generation radio telescopes such as the Square Kilometre Array, seemingly minor changes in ...
A giant distributed radio telescope is an unusual kind of massive parallel computing system. The des...
AbstractIn this work, we demonstrate how a cost-benefit analysis of different scenarios reveals insi...
Abstract — The design studies of the embedded systems for future distributed data-processing applica...
Modern radio telescopes require highly energy/power-efficient computing systems. Signal processing p...
Large sensor-based infrastructures for radio astronomy will be among the most intensive data-driven ...
Large sensor-based infrastructures for radio astronomy will be among the most intensive data-driven ...
With the advent of the new class of radio telescopes as for example the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) ...
Upcoming and future astronomy research facilities will systematically generate terabyte-sized data s...
The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be the largest radio telescope in the world, with an aperture ...
LOFAR is the first of a new generation of radio telescopes. Rather than using expensive dishes, it f...
Large-scale science instruments, such as the distributed radio telescope LOFAR, show that we are in ...
Large-scale science instruments, such as the LHC and recent distributed radio telescopes such as LOF...
Traditional radio astronomy instrumentation relies on custom built designs, specialized for each sci...
The deeper we look into the universe, the closer we get to its origin. This fact triggers astronomer...
For next-generation radio telescopes such as the Square Kilometre Array, seemingly minor changes in ...
A giant distributed radio telescope is an unusual kind of massive parallel computing system. The des...
AbstractIn this work, we demonstrate how a cost-benefit analysis of different scenarios reveals insi...
Abstract — The design studies of the embedded systems for future distributed data-processing applica...
Modern radio telescopes require highly energy/power-efficient computing systems. Signal processing p...
Large sensor-based infrastructures for radio astronomy will be among the most intensive data-driven ...
Large sensor-based infrastructures for radio astronomy will be among the most intensive data-driven ...
With the advent of the new class of radio telescopes as for example the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) ...
Upcoming and future astronomy research facilities will systematically generate terabyte-sized data s...
The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be the largest radio telescope in the world, with an aperture ...
LOFAR is the first of a new generation of radio telescopes. Rather than using expensive dishes, it f...