NVIDIA Tesla GPUs inside three of world's top five supercomputers

Posted on Monday, November 15 2010 @ 17:15 CET by Thomas De Maesschalck
NVIDIA proudly announced its Tesla GPUs can now be found in three of world's top five supercomputers:
The November 2010 list of the "Top500" fastest supercomputers in the world was released today on www.top500.org and it revealed that NVIDIA(R) Tesla(TM) GPUs are now powering three of the top five systems.

Tesla GPUs were featured in the number one, three and four slots with the recently announced Tianhe-1A system taking the top spot with a performance record of 2.507 petaflops. The five highest-ranked systems were as follows (GPU-enabled systems in green):

Rank - Name - Location - Linpack Perf. - # of GPUs - Power Consumption
1. Tianhe-1A - China - 2.507 PF - 7168 - 4.04 MW
2. Jaguar - USA - 1.75 PF - n/a - 6.95 MW
3. Nebulae - China - 1.27 PF - 4640 - 2.55 MW
4. Tsubame 2.0 - Japan - 1.192 PF - 4200 - 1.340 MW
5. Hopper - USA - 1.05 PF - n/a - 2.93 MW

The top three GPU supercomputers deliver more performance than the rest of the Top 10 systems combined. The most notable new entry to the Top500 is Tsubame 2.0, the new supercomputer from Tokyo Institute of Technology. The system delivers petaflop-class performance while remaining extremely efficient, consuming just 1.340 megawatts, dramatically less power than any other system on the top five.

"Tsubame 2.0 is an impressive achievement, balancing performance and power to deliver the most energy efficient petaflop-class supercomputer ever built," said Bill Dally, chief scientist at NVIDIA. "The path to exascale computing will be forged by groundbreaking systems like Tsubame 2.0."

GPUs have quickly become the enabling technology behind the world's top supercomputers. They contain hundreds of parallel processor cores capable of dividing up large computational workloads and processing them simultaneously, significantly increasing system performance. Heterogeneous systems, built with GPUs and CPUs, require less space and consume less power, making supercomputing more affordable and more accessible than ever before.


About the Author

Thomas De Maesschalck

Thomas has been messing with computer since early childhood and firmly believes the Internet is the best thing since sliced bread. Enjoys playing with new tech, is fascinated by science, and passionate about financial markets. When not behind a computer, he can be found with running shoes on or lifting heavy weights in the weight room.



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