Petascale computing
In computing, petascale refers to a computer system capable of reaching performance in excess of one petaflops, i.e. one quadrillion floating point operations per second. The standard benchmark tool is LINPACK and Top500.org is the organization which tracks the fastest supercomputers. Some uniquely specialized petascale computers do not rank on the Top500 list since they cannot run LINPACK. This makes comparisons to ordinary supercomputers hard.
Petascale can also refer to very large storage systems where the capacity exceeds one petabyte (PB).
Applications
Petascale computing is being used to do advanced computations in fields such as weather and climate simulation, nuclear simulations, cosmology, quantum chemistry, lower-level organism brain simulation, and fusion science.
Development
The National Science Foundation is responsible for initiating and funding several petascale computers in the United States, as well as DARPA who gave IBM the contract to develop the petascale PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computer System) platform.
China has developed four petascale computers, Nebulae, Tianhe-I, Tianhe-2, and the Sunway TaihuLight.
Russia has developed the Lomonosov (rus) petascale computer.
Other countries, such as Germany and Japan, have plans of their own for petascale computers.
Petascale computers are under development from manufacturers such as Sun Microsystems, Cray, IBM, Dawning, SGI, and NEC.
Active
As of 2012, these are the known active petascale computers in the world.
- Roadrunner, built by IBM, was the first computer to go petascale, and did so on May 25, 2008, with sustained performance of 1.026 petaflops.
- XT5 "Jaguar", built by Cray, was the second, later in 2008. After an update in 2009, its performance reached 1.759 petaflops.[1]
- SGI Pleiades which went online in 2008 with a performance of 600 TFLOPS, reached petascale in 2012.
- Nebulae built by Dawning, was the third petascale computer and the first built by China with a performance of 1.271 petaflops in 2010.
- Tianhe-1A built by NUDT, at 2.566 petaflops in 2010.
- K computer built by Fujitsu, is the second fastest supercomputer in the world, at 8.162 petaflops in 2011.
- Tsubame built by NEC/HP
- Cielo built by Cray
- Hopper built by Cray
- Tera 100 built by Bull SA
- IBM Sequoia
- Piz Daint built by Cray
- Cori built by Cray
- IBM Mira
- Cray Titan, an updated version of Jaguar.
- Tianhe-2
- Sunway TaihuLight
The first 20 supercomputers on the June 2012 list are petascale.
Other
- RIKEN MDGRAPE-3 in Japan which went online in 2006 reaches petascale performance but can't run LINPACK, so comparisons to regular supercomputers are hard.
- Blue Waters in Illinois
Under construction
- JUGENE, an upgraded Blue Gene/P system at Jülich Research Centre in Germany, operational in mid 2009.[2]
Platform examples
- SGI Altix
- Sun Constellation System
- IBM Blue Gene/P, Blue Gene/Q and PERCS
- Cray XT5, XT6, XE6, XK6
See also
References
- ↑ National Center for Computational Sciences (NCCS) (2010). "World's Most Powerful Supercomputer for Science!". NCCS. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
- ↑ IBM Press Release (2009-02-10). "New IBM Petaflop Supercomputer at German Forschungszentrum Juelich to Be Europe's Most Powerful". IBM Inc. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
External links
- Petascale computers: the next supercomputing wave
- National Science Board Approves Funds for Petascale Computing Systems
- Massive $208 million petascale computer gets green light
- Much Ado About Petascale
- Petascale Climate Modeling Heats Up