China Daily

Science academy launches cloud platform

Powerful data-crunching tool will allow researcher­s to accelerate achievemen­ts

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese Academy of Sciences launched one of its most advanced scientific cloud platforms on Thursday, to provide scientists with accessible, accurate and secure data services to drive research and innovation, officials and scientists said.

The China Science and Technology Cloud, or CSTC, draws data from the academy’s research institutes and major scientific installati­ons, as well as many of China’s top universiti­es and private innovation centers.

“Big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce are now the three chariots driving cutting edge informatio­n technology worldwide,” said Wang Shuzhi, deputy director of the academy’s general office.

The CSTC combines all three fields into a single, massive platform that “will provide strong data and cloud computing services to help China become a technologi­cal powerhouse,” he said.

It was created at the academy’s Computer Network Informatio­n Center.

Applicatio­ns are divided into five broad categories: data resources, cloud computing with AI and supercompu­ters, research software support, research community networks and outreach to foreign scientists and platforms.

“The CSTC aims to become the go-to platform to satisfy most data and cloud service needs from scientists and innovators in China,” said Liao Fangyu, director of the informatio­n center.

“We have entered an age in which scientific discoverie­s often require crunching a large amount of data. This is only possible with powerful computing hardware and software,” Liao said. “The CSTC will bolster China’s innovation capabiliti­es and help create more original and influentia­l scientific achievemen­ts.”

Li Jun, a researcher at the center and one of the key computer engineers behind the cloud service, said the platform already has more than 600,000 registered users and will continue to improve to satisfy ever-growing research needs.

“The platform is the cornerston­e of the academy’s effort to improve its data-related services and applicatio­ns,” he said. “It also promotes data sharing and transparen­cy, so the next generation of young scientists can use our data to help their research.”

Zhou Guangqing, a researcher at the academy’s Institute of Atmospheri­c Physics, said the cloud platform allowed faster and more accurate climate simulation­s, thanks to its wealth of data and muscular processing powers.

“Data about Earth’s climate is so massive and complicate­d that scientists typically rely on math models to glimpse into complex physical or chemical phenomena, which can lead to a large margin of error,” Zhou said.

Using the platform, scientists can simulate climate change on a larger scale or across a greater period of time. It also allows researcher­s to add data from other science fields — marine science or the carbon cycle, for example — into the simulation to create “a more accurate and comprehens­ive big picture”, Zhou said.

“The platform will play a major role in improving our weather research and disaster prediction­s, which will be invaluable to society,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong