China supercomputer named world's second-fastest
June 1, 2010 The Nebulae system at the National Supercomputing Centre in
Shenzhen in southern China came in behind the U.S. Department of
Energy's Jaguar in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, according to the list
released Monday.
Supercomputers are used for complex work such as modeling
weather systems, simulating nuclear explosions and designing
jetliners.
The semiannual TOP500 list highlighted Beijing's efforts to join
the United States, Europe and Japan in the global technology elite
and its sharp increases in research spending, driven by booming
economic growth.
It also reflected China's continued reliance on Western
know-how: Nebulae was built by China's Dawning Information Industry
Ltd. but uses processors from Intel Corp. and Nvidia Corp., both
American companies.
The Nebulae is capable of sustained computing of 1.271 petaflops
- or 1,271 trillion calculations - per second, according to TOP500.
It said the Jaguar was capable of sustained computing of 1.75
petaflops.
The Chinese computer ranked first in theoretical computing speed
at 2.98 petaflops, the group said. The list was compiled by Hans
Meuer of the University of Mannheim, Germany; Erich Strohmaier and
Horst Simon of NERSC/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Jack
Dongarra of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
The communist Beijing government wants China to evolve from a
low-cost factory into an prosperous "innovation society." A
15-year government plan issued in 2006 promises support for areas
ranging from computers to lasers to genetics.
Boosted by Nebulae's performance, China rose to No. 2 overall on
the TOP500 list with 24 of the 500 systems on the list and 9.2
percent of global supercomputing capacity, up from 21 systems six
months ago.
The United States held onto its overall lead with 282 of the 500
systems and 55.4 percent of installed performance.
Europe had 144 systems on the list, including 38 in Britain, 29
in France and 24 in Germany.
Elsewhere in Asia, Japan had 18 supercomputers on the list, up
from 16 six months ago, and India had five.
A second Chinese computer also made the Top 10. The Tianhe-1 at
the National Super Computer Center in the eastern city of Tianjin,
at No. 7, uses processors made by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices
Inc., another American company.
The list also reflected breakneck advances in supercomputing
speeds.
No. 1 on the June 2008 list was the Roadrunner system at the Los
Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, capable of 1.04
petaflops, or about two-thirds of Jaguar's level. In the latest
list, Roadrunner dropped to No. 3.