Monday, 18 June 2012

NNSA Sequoia supercomputer takes mobile phone industry's quickest title, prevents nuclear testing

NNSA Sequoia supercomputer takes worlds fastest title, prevents nuclear testing

Fujitsu's 10.51 petaflop K supercomputer is pretty fast, but will it pack enough computational oomph to push away subterranean nuclear testing Most likely -- however the NNSA's new 16 petaflop rig will it better. Based on the National Nuclear Security Administration, a supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, named Sequoia, has become the quickest Supercomputer in the world, clocking in at 16.32 sustained petaflops. "Sequoia will give you a far more complete knowledge of weapons performance, particularly hydrodynamics and qualities of materials at extreme pressure sand temps," states NNSA Director of Advanced Simulation and Computing Bob Meisner, explaining that supercomputer simulations will "offer the effort to increase the existence of getting older weapons systems." Translation Sequoia can help the NNSA keep your US' nuclear stockpile stable without turning to nuclear testing more computer systems, less explosions. We can not think about a much better factor related to 98,304 compute nodes, 1.six million cores and 1.6 petabytes of memory spread across 96 shelves -- are you able to Browse the official pr release following the break.

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NNSA Sequoia supercomputer takes mobile phone industry's quickest title, prevents nuclear testing initially made an appearance on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 03:00:00 EDT. Please visit our terms to be used of feeds.

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