China has now taken the lead in the supercomputing industry as they now have more supercomputers than the United States with their new Sunway TaihuLight machine that has a theoretical top speed of 125 petaflops.
Top500, who compiles the rankings of supercomputers twice every year, has revealed that the China-made Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer is more than two times as powerful as the previous recordholder. It is located in the Chinese Supercomputing Center located in the Jiuangsu province.
What made the achievement more impressive is that the Sunway TaihuLight is made from China's own chips without relying on existing architecture from Intel, the Wall Street Journal has learned. China has also outranked the U.S in terms of the number of supercomputing machines on the Top500 list with 167 to 165, respectively.
That seems to be an incredible leap from 2001 when China had no supercomputers on the list. They have also outranked themselves as the previous top position was also held by the country with their Tianhe-2 supercomputer which was built upon the U.S.-based Intel's architecture.
The U.S. Congress is also nearly finished in passing legislation that would help speed up the development of an even more powerful supercomputer by 2023. However, computer scientist Jack Dongarra from the University of Tennessee said that the U.S. won't have a supercomputer that would be able to beat the current champion until 2018.
China's Sunway TaihuLight is powered byt the SW26010 processor that was designed by the Shanghai High Performance IC Design Center, Bloomberg reported. It is also claimed that the machine is more efficient in consuming power.
The supercomputing machine has more than 40,000 chips that contains 10.65 million processor cores in 40 cabinets. Meanwhile, the fastest supercomputer from the U.S. only has about 560,000 cores in total.
Intel has not commented yet regarding the amazing feat that China has done. NVIDIA, on the other hand, just revealed their new Tesla GP100 supercomputing GPU which packs more computing power than their previous Maxwell architecture.
The U.S. will have to double their efforts if they want to beat the Sunway TaihuLight's supercomputing prowess. It is not known whether the architecture China used will be shared with the U.S. but it would be least likely considering that Intel was banned from exporting more chips in order to upgrade their Tianhe-2 supercomputer last year.
The stages of supercomputer application may be summarized in the following table:
Decade Uses and computer involved 1970s Weather forecasting, aerodynamic research (Cray-1).[85] 1980s Probabilistic analysis,[86] radiation shielding modeling[87] (CDC Cyber). 1990s Brute force code breaking (EFF DES cracker).[88] 2000s 3D nuclear test simulations as a substitute for legal conduct Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (ASCI Q).[89] 2010s Molecular Dynamics Simulation (Tianhe-1A)[90]
The IBM Blue Gene/P computer has been used to simulate a number of artificial neurons equivalent to approximately one percent of a human cerebral cortex, containing 1.6 billion neurons with approximately 9 trillion connections. The same research group also succeeded in using a supercomputer to simulate a number of artificial neurons equivalent to the entirety of a rat's brain.[91]
Modern-day weather forecasting also relies on supercomputers. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration uses supercomputers to crunch hundreds of millions of observations to help make weather forecasts more accurate.[92]
In 2011, the challenges and difficulties in pushing the envelope in supercomputing were underscored by IBM's abandonment of the Blue Waters petascale project.[93]
The Advanced Simulation and Computing Program currently uses supercomputers to maintain and simulate the United States nuclear stockpile.
A government strong enough to impose your standards is strong enough to ban them.
An interesting achievement but I can't imagine its practical use.
I'm with you on this rik, but no doubt they have something in mind. They are focusing on space and may have a different approach to crunching the numbers. the Chinese have been very innovative in various ways through the centuries