Infographic: Miniscule Worlds Create Extreme Data Amounts
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory – located at and operated by Stanford University, California, on behalf of the US Department of Energy – is using a two-mile-long linear accelerator (linac) to drive a laser, creating X-ray pulses of unprecedented brilliance. The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) produces pulses of X-rays more than a billion times brighter than the most powerful existing sources.
These pictures shed light on the fundamental processes of chemistry and life itself – by sequencing images of the ultra-small, taken with the ultra-fast pulses of the LCLS, scientists are essentially creating molecular movies, revealing the frenetic action of the atomic world.
The LCLS data team manages about 10 petabytes of data – including user-generated data and tape copies of raw data – which is about three times more than Netflix’s total data library. Just one petabyte of data would fill DVDs stacked as tall as the Transamerica Pyramid. -- Source and © iSGTW
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