[mission]/[instrument]/data[m][n]
[campaign]/[platform group]/data[m][n]
[campaign]/[measurement group]/data[n]
[program]/[measurement group]/data[n]
[measurement group]/[data[n]
[instrument]/[shortname.version]
In the above syntax, the processing level of the product is depicted by [m] where ‘m’ ranges from 1 through 3 for products from satellite instruments. (i.e., NASA satellite products are generally depicted as belonging to a Level of processing, Level 1 being calibrated/geolocated radiances through Level 3 being global grids of derived geophysical values). When a Level designation isn’t appropriate [m] is dropped from the syntax.
Keyword "DATA" is placed in the DOI to distinguish raw and processed data collections from research papers.
A sequence number is assigned on a first-come-first-serve basis, represented by [n].
There is an online tool that can generate a citation by entering the doi and selecting the appropriate journal and language.
http://crosscite.org/citeproc/
For example, the doi:10.3334/ORNLDAAC/1099 for the American Geological Union in American English:
Putting DOIs in Product MetadataDOIs have additional value when stored in product metadata. Researchers that acquire product data files should be able use the DOI to find the definitive documentation from NASA’s Scientific and Technical Information archives. Adding DOIs to product metadata will also enable tools for provenance tracking – help find more information about the creation of the data product
.
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