Top 10 Supercomputers: U.S. Still Dominates
NASA and Energy Dept. supercomputers nabbed five of the top 10 spots in a bi-annual list of the world's most powerful computers.

However, a Japanese supercomputer called K computer--run by the RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science and developed by Fujitsu--remained No. 1 on the list for the second straight time, a position the feds are vying for with the development of a new supercomputer called Titan.
More Government Insights
White Papers
- Mobile BI: Actionable Intelligence for the Agile Enterprise
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
Reports
More >>Webcasts
- Maximize ROI with Database Consolidation onto Private Clouds
- Five Jobs You Can Do Better with Intelligent Decision Automation
Four supercomputers run by the Department of Energy (DOE) and one by NASA remained among the top 10 most powerful in the world, all of them holding steady at their positions from a list of the top machines published in June.
Supercomputers on the biannual list are ranked by how quickly they can run calculations according to Linpack, a benchmark application developed to solve a complex system of linear equations.
[ Learn more about government supercomputers. Read Feds Detail Supercomputing's Future. ]
Several top supercomputer researchers compile the list--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 in Knoxville.
The U.S. government's most powerful machine on the list is a Cray system called Jaguar that is run by the DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory; it is ranked third overall. Moreover, the lab is currently building a system called Titan that researchers claim could eventually give K a run for the top spot.
Titan potentially will deliver 20 petaflops of performance at its peak, nearly two times faster than Japan's K computer, which hit 10.51 petaflops at its peak to reach the top spot on the latest list. Last year, K achieved 8.2-petaflop performance for its top ranking. "Flop" stands for floating-point operations per second, and a petaflop computer can perform a thousand trillion flops.
The other federal-run systems in the top 10 include a DOE Cray computer called Cielo at No. 6; an SGI system called Pleiades at the NASA Ames Research Center at No. 7; a DOE Cray system called Hopper at No. 8; and a DOE IBM system called Roadrunner at No. 10.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Department of Defense also were among federal agencies that made the top 500 with several of their supercomputing systems.
The government uses supercomputers for a range of research requiring high-computational processing, such as weather and climate simulations, space-technology development and testing, and medical research.
Rounding out the top 10 list are a Chinese supercomputer called Tianhe at No. 2; another Chinese system called Nebulae at No. 4; a Japanese supercomputer called TSUBAME at No. 5; and a system in France called Tera-100 at No. 9.
Indeed, if the list is any indication, supercomputers continue to achieve premium performance. The June list was the first time all of the systems in the top 10 achieved petaflop or greater performance, and all of the systems on the November list did as well.
Still, while K achieved a faster performance than the other systems to maintain its position, all of the others in the top 10 sustained the same peak performance from the June list.
Our annual Federal Government IT Priorities Survey shows how agencies are managing the many mandates competing for their limited resources. Also in the new issue of InformationWeek Government: NASA veterans launch cloud startups, and U.S. Marshals Service completes tech revamp. Download the issue now. (Free registration required.)
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. | |
|
|
T-Shirt Giveaway: Each week we're selecting one great comment from our readers. The author of the comment will receive an InformaitonWeek Community t-shirt. So get posting! |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
This Week's Issue
Free Print Subscription
SubscribeCurrent Government Issue
- Going Mobile: As federal agencies embrace devices and apps to meet employee demand, the White House seeks one comprehensive mobile strategy.
- Smartphone Security: The National Security Agency is developing technologies to make commercial devices suitable for intelligence work.
- Read the Current Issue
Technology Whitepapers
- Mobile BI: Actionable Intelligence for the Agile Enterprise
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
- The BlackBerry PlayBook tablet's Good Bones - by BlackBerry
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
- New Visual and Wizard-Driven Paradigms for Exploring Data and Developing Analytic Workflows
Featured Whitepaper
In this white paper, Tripwire discusses strategies for defending cyber threats that include monitoring security status of systems throughout the enterprise, detecting threats to sensitive data, and responding to threats in real-time.
Learn More
Featured Reports
Featured Webcasts
- Maximize ROI with Database Consolidation onto Private Clouds
- Effective IT Inventory and Asset Management: From Quagmire to Quick Fix
- Outsourcing Security: What Every Potential Cloud Security Customer Should Know
- Server Virtualization Gets Relief From Tivoli Storage Manager for Virtual Environments
- The ABC's of Cloud Computing in the Midmarket













