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Preserving NASA Historic and Current Mission Data and Adding Value to These for Future ResearchersThe NASA Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC) has been actively involved in many aspects of ensuring the long-term preservation of NASA earth science data and knowledge. This involves both the recovery and preservation of early NASA meteorological and other earth observation data, as well as preserving the more recent Earth Observation System (EOS) mission data sets which continue or have reached their end of lifetime. The GES DISC adds value to these preserved data by adding metadata and making the data available online to future researchers.

The early NASA meteorological and earth observation data sets from the 1960s and 70s were originally archived on magnetic tapes, and visualizations of these data were preserved on 70-mm film. As these media have aged, their contents have been at risk of permanent loss. NASA has given the task of preserving these early data sets to the GES DISC and making these data sets easily available to the public. The data from these early missions are potentially useful to climate researchers as these are some of the only global measurements made at their time. These old data on magnetic tapes and film strips do not contain easily readable metadata, and so to add value the GES DISC has added digital metadata to them so that the data are searchable and findable.

The GES DISC is also involved in preserving the data and knowledge from the EOS era missions. The GES DISC follows the guidelines developed for the preservation of data as specified in the NASA EOS Data and Information System (EOSDIS) Earth Science Data Preservation Content Specification (423-SPEC-001) document. To date, the GES DISC has consulted with the data science teams from the following missions: UARS, Earth Probe TOMS, Aura HIRDLS, and SORCE, in order to properly preserve their data and accompanying documentation. The GES DISC is also currently working with the EOS science teams from TRMM, AIRS, MLS, OMI and additional missions to ensure that the relevant documents and data sets are properly archived for future researchers. A standardized procedure for mission data preservation following 423-SPEC-001 makes preservation among the many NASA EOSDIS data centers uniform, so that these could be transitioned easily to a common EOSDIS preservation repository.

This presentation will give an overview of the preservation and recovery of the old NASA historical data sets archived at the GES DISC, as well as the data and documentation preservation efforts of the EOS era missions.
Document ID
20230006172
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Poster
Authors
James Johnson
(Adnet Systems (United States) Bethesda, Maryland, United States)
Ed Esfandiari
(Adnet Systems (United States) Bethesda, Maryland, United States)
Emily Zamkoff
(Telophase Corporation Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Irina Gerasimov
(Adnet Systems (United States) Bethesda, Maryland, United States)
Atheer F Al-jazrawi
(Telophase Corporation Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Gary Alcott
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
April 21, 2023
Subject Category
Documentation and Information Science
Meeting Information
Meeting: PV2023 Conference: Adding Value (to) and preserving Scientific & Technical data
Location: Geneva
Country: CH
Start Date: May 2, 2023
End Date: May 4, 2023
Sponsors: European Organization for Nuclear Research
Funding Number(s)
TASK: 5001.00.023
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80GSFC23CA040
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Peer Committee
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