December 5, 2001
The Future Looks Bright for "StarLight"
CHICAGO, IL -- The new "Science Technology And
Research Light-Illuminated Gigabit
High-performance Transit" is a constellation of words that condense
nicely
into the acronym "StarLight."
An international high-speed optical fiber network connection point --
developed and operated in partnership by the University of Illinois at
Chicago, Northwestern University and the Argonne National Laboratory --
StarLight links a global network of research computers via advanced
fiber optic equipment. It is both a stable high-speed link for advanced
scientific work and provides a site for public and private information
technology clients to test hardware for reliability, much as a
speedway is used to test new cars.
StarLight provides a communication intersection for the "information
super highway" as no other. As UIC computer science professor and
StarLight co-creator Tom DeFanti put it: "Think of a two-lane road
passing by your house as the equivalent of, say, a DSL or cable modem
line. StarLight supports networking equivalent to a 10,000-lane highway."
The Netherlands' national research and education computer network
SURFnet has signed up to be the fastest customer to connected to the
Chicago-based facility, moving data at the blazing speed of 2.5 giga
(billion) bits a second. "We're working to get it up to 10 gigabits --
and beyond," said DeFanti. The higher speeds will be reached as early
as next spring.
With 10 gigabit links expected to Canada, Asia and other European
sites within the next year, StarLight promises to support real-time,
multi-site virtual reality presentations, advanced interactive data
mining, remote control of large-scale telescopes and microscopes and
other computing advances that will let the international scientific
research community collaborate over the challenging problems of our time.
StarLight evolved from an earlier broadband facility called
"STAR TAP" (Science, Technology And Research Transit Access Point)
developed by UIC and Argonne researchers. STAR TAP, with a maximum
bandwidth speed of 622 megabits a second, continues to serve the
needs of researchersworldwide who cannot yet get the extra data
flow offered by StarLight.
Joe Mambretti directs the International Center for Advanced
Internet Research at Northwestern University. He says the world's
advanced research community is very enthusiastic about StarLight.
"The group of us developing StarLight has been at the forefront of
advanced networking for the last 15 years. Our community develops
advanced applications requiring these high-performance networking
technologies. There's no end to this trend in sight," Mambretti said.
StarLight will also host connections to the world's most-advanced
multi-site supercomputing system, called TeraGrid, scheduled to begin
operation in mid-2002. It also connects with the State of Illinois-funded
optical research network called I-WIRE.
StarLight's physical connection and routing point is at Northwestern
University's downtown Chicago campus. The high-tech facility offers
ample space for networking and computing equipment expansion -- a rare
and valuable feature offered to researchers worldwide.
Development funding for StarLight comes from the U.S. National
Science Foundation and international partner research networks. Argonne
National Laboratory's Math and Computer Science Division provides network
design and engineering, and is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Contact:
Paul Francuch
francuch@uic.edu
ph: +1.312.996.3457