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What is a DOI?

A Digital Object Identifier or DOI is a unique alphanumeric string used to identify an digital object and provide a permanent link online.  DOIs are often used in online publications in citations.  DOIs are assigned and regulated by The International DOI Foundation (IDF). ()
DOIs are alphanumeric strings in the following format:
–doi:[prefix]/[suffix]
Prefix – 10.[number] where [number] identifies registrant agent.  5067 has been assigned for NASA ESDIS.
Suffix – uniquely identifies the data item and it’s format is assigned and managed by the registrant agent.

DOI Suffix Model

The following are models for a standard DOI suffix string vocabulary; they will be used as guidance in assigning EOSDIS DOIs. Forward slash is used to represent containment. The purpose is to characterize the data product. 

[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].

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