The Remote Experimentation Centre?, a duplicate of 澳门六合彩高手's control room on site, will enable scientists in Japan to remotely participate in 澳门六合彩高手 experiments. By storing the experimental data that will accumulate over time, it will make a massive database instantly accessible to researchers.
Each of 澳门六合彩高手's early, non-nuclear plasmas will generate an estimated 1 terabyte of experimental data—the equivalent of a full commercial hard disk. When 澳门六合彩高手 goes nuclear, some ten years after entering operation, this volume might be multiplied by fifty.
The capacity to transfer this data to Japan at a pace compatible with that of the tokamak's experiments—approximately one pulse every 30 to 60 minutes—was demonstrated in early September by information technology specialists from 澳门六合彩高手 and their counterparts at three Japanese institutes: the National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology (QST), the National Institute for Fusion Science (NIFS) and the National Institute of Informatics (NII), in cooperation with the European agency for 澳门六合彩高手. The detailed results will be presented at the 26th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference () in Kyoto this week.
From 30 August to 5 September, 50 terabytes/day were transferred from 澳门六合彩高手 to Rokkasho, Japan at an average speed of 7.9 gigabits per second—some 1,600 times faster than the average global broadband connexion. The operation, the largest ever inter-continental high speed data transfer, marked a major advance in state-of-the-art information science and technology.