BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese university has built the world’s fastest  supercomputer, almost doubling the speed of the U.S. machine that  previously claimed the top spot and underlining China’s rise as a  science and technology powerhouse.
 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/18/tianhe-2_n_3458981.html The Tianhe-2 has a peak performance speed of 54.9 quadrillion operations per second.
The semiannual TOP500 listing of the world’s fastest supercomputers  released Monday says the Tianhe-2 developed by the National University  of Defense Technology in central China’s Changsha city is capable of  sustained computing of 33.86 petaflops per second. That’s the equivalent  of 33,860 trillion calculations per second.
The Tianhe-2, which means Milky Way-2, knocks the U.S. Energy  Department’s Titan machine off the No. 1 spot. It achieved 17.59  petaflops per second.
Supercomputers are used for complex work such as modeling weather  systems, simulating nuclear explosions and designing jetliners.
It’s the second time a Chinese computer has been named the world’s  fastest. In November 2010, the Tianhe-2′s predecessor, Tianhe-1A, had  that honor before Japan’s K computer overtook it a few months later on  the TOP500 list, a ranking curated by three computer scientists at  universities in the U.S. and Germany.
The Tianhe-2 shows how China is leveraging rapid economic growth and  sharp increases in research spending to join the United States, Europe  and Japan in the global technology elite.
“Most of the features of the system were developed in China, and they  are only using Intel for the main compute part,” TOP500 editor Jack  Dongarra, who toured the Tianhe-2 facility in May, said in a news  release. “That is, the interconnect, operating system, front-end  processors and software are mainly Chinese.”
Share This
Showing posts with label TOP500 Supercomputers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TOP500 Supercomputers. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Tianhe-2, Chinese supercomputer named as world’s fastest
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
