Visualizing The Power Of The World's Supercomputers
Visualizing The Power Of The World's Supercomputers
BY TYLER DURDEN FRIDAY, JAN 21, 2022 - 04:15 AM
A supercomputer is a machine that is built to handle billions,
if not trillions of calculations at once. Each supercomputer is actually made
up of many individual computers (known as nodes) that work together in
parallel.
A common metric for measuring the performance of these machines
is flops,
or floating point
operations per second.
In this visualization, Visual Capitalist's Marcus Lu uses November
2021 data from TOP500 to
visualize the computing power of the world’s top five supercomputers. For added
context, a number of modern consumer devices were included in the comparison.
Ranking by Teraflops
Because supercomputers can achieve over one quadrillion flops,
and consumer devices are much less powerful, we’ve used teraflops as our
comparison metric.
1 teraflop = 1,000,000,000,000 (1 trillion) flops.
Supercomputer Fugaku was
completed in March 2021, and is officially the world’s most powerful
supercomputer. It’s used for various applications, including weather
simulations and innovative drug discovery.
Sunway Taihulight is
officially China’s top supercomputer and fourth most powerful in the world.
That said, some experts believe that the country is already operating two much more powerful systems, based on
data from anonymous sources.
As you can see, the most advanced consumer devices do not come
close to supercomputing power. For example, it would take the combined power of
4,000 Nvidia Titan RTX graphics cards (the most powerful consumer card
available) to measure up to the Fugaku.
Upcoming Supercomputers
One of China’s unrevealed supercomputers is supposedly
named Oceanlite,
and is a successor to Sunway Taihulight. It’s believed to have reached 1.3
exaflops, or 1.3 quintillion flops. The following table makes it easier to
follow all of these big numbers.
In the U.S., rival chipmakers AMD and Intel have both won contracts from the U.S. Department of Energy to build exascale supercomputers. On the AMD side, there’s Frontier and El Capitan, while on the Intel side, there’s Aurora.
Also involved in the EL Capitan project is Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE),
which claims the supercomputer will be able to reach 2 exaflops upon its
completion in 2023. All of this power will be used to support several exciting
endeavors:
- Enable advanced simulation and modeling to support the
U.S. nuclear stockpile and ensure its reliability and security.
- Accelerate cancer drug discovery from six years to one
year through a partnership with pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline
- Understand the dynamic and mutations of RAS proteins
that are linked to 30% of human cancers
Altogether, exascale computing represents the ability to conduct
complex analysis in a matter of seconds, rather than hours. This could unlock
an even faster pace of innovation.
https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/visualizing-power-worlds-supercomputers
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