An IBM supercomputer has been ranked as the worlds fastest, according to the Top500 list of the worlds fastest supercomputers.
The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) on June 18 announced that a supercomputer called Sequoia at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) was ranked the worlds most powerful computing system. This is the first time since 2009 that a U.S.-built supercomputer has taken the top spot on the Top500 list.
Clocking in at 16.32 sustained petaflops (quadrillion floating point operations per second), Sequoia earned the No. 1 ranking on the industry standard Top500 list of the worlds fastest supercomputers at the International Supercomputing Conference (ISC12) in Hamburg, Germany. Sequoia was built for NNSA by IBM.
A 96-rack IBM Blue Gene/Q system, Sequoia will enable simulations that explore phenomena at a level of detail never before possible. Sequoia is dedicated to NNSAs Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) program for stewardship of the nations nuclear weapons stockpile, a joint effort from LLNL, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories, IBM said.
Computing platforms like Sequoia help the United States keep its nuclear stockpile safe, secure, and effective without the need for underground testing, NNSA Administrator Thomas DAgostino said in a statement. While Sequoia may be the fastest, the underlying computing capabilities it provides give us increased confidence in the nations nuclear deterrent as the weapons stockpile changes under treaty agreements, a critical part of President Obamas nuclear security agenda. Sequoia also represents continued American leadership in high-performance computing (HPC), key to the technology innovation that drives high-quality jobs and economic prosperity.
Sequoia will provide a more complete understanding of weapons performance, notably hydrodynamics and properties of materials at extreme pressures and temperatures, Bob Meisner, NNSA director of the ASC program, said in a statement. In particular, the system will enable suites of highly resolved uncertainty quantification calculations to support the effort to extend the life of aging weapons systems: what we call a life-extension program (LEP).
Uncertainty quantification, or UQ, is the quantitative characterization and reduction of uncertainty in computer applications through running very large suites of calculations to characterize the effects of minor differences in the systems. Sources of uncertainty are rife in the natural sciences and engineering. UQ uses statistical methods to determine likely outcomes.
NNSA officials said the Sequoia system will be an important tool used to support stockpile life-extension programs, including the B61 and the W78. By reducing the time required for these studies, total costs are also reduced. In addition, the machine is expected to enhance NNSAs ability to sustain the stockpile by resolving any significant findings in weapons systems, bringing greater power to the annual assessment of the stockpile, and anticipating and avoiding future problems that inevitably result from aging. All of this helps to ensure that the nation will never have to return to nuclear testing, the NNSA said.
Sequoia is an exciting achievement and not just for its speed and energy efficiency, but also for the important and complex work it can support to safeguard the nations nuclear stockpile, Colin Parris, general manager of IBM Power Systems, said in a statement. With supercomputers capable of 16 sustained petaflops, our ability to effect strategic change in areas like life sciences, public safety, energy and transportation that make our world smarter is greater than ever. The improvements in affordability, performance, efficiency and size that Sequoia delivers will also enable a broader set of commercial customers to implement HPC for their competitive advantage.
Supercomputers such as Sequoia have given the U.S. confidence in its nuclear weapons stockpile over the 20 years since nuclear testing ended in 1992, the NNSA said. The insight that comes from supercomputing simulations is also vital to addressing nonproliferation and counterterrorism issues as well as informing other national security decisions such as nuclear weapon policy and treaty agreements.
The NNSA/LLNL/IBM partnership has produced six HPC systems that have been ranked among the worlds most powerful computers including: the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI) Blue Pacific; ASCI White; the Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Purple; Blue Gene/L; Blue Gene/P; and Blue Gene/Q, Sequoia. ASCI White, Blue Gene/L and now Sequoia all attained a No. 1 ranking on the Top500 list.
Sequoia is primarily water-cooled and consists of 96 racks, 98,304 compute nodes, 1.6 million cores and 1.6 petabytes of memory. Though orders of magnitude more powerful than such predecessor systems as ASC Purple and Blue Gene/L, Sequoia will be roughly 90 times more power-efficient than Purple and about eight times more than BG/L relative to the peak speeds of these systems.