ONE OF THE WORLD'S FASTEST SUPERCOMPUTERS TO STUDY CLIMATE CHANGE AND SEVERE WEATHER


A new supercomputer in Wyoming, US, is all set to be ranked among the world's-fastest and help study phenomena, including climate change, severe weather, wildfires and solar flares. Houston-based Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has won a bid to provide the $35 million to $40 million machine for a supercomputing centre in Cheyenne, the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, has announced.

The HPE-Cray EX supercomputer will theoretically be able to perform almost 20 quadrillion calculations per second, 3.5 times faster than the existing machine at the NCARWyoming Supercomputing Center. The new machine's maximum speed per second will be roughly equivalent to each person on the Earth, completing a math equation every second for an entire month. That power, according to experts, will enable some of the most-sophisticated simulations of large-scale natural and human-influenced events

Did You Know

The facility's current supercomputer, named Cheyenne, is over three times faster than its predecessor, which was named Yellowstone. A contest among the Wyoming schoolchildren will decide the new supercomputer's name.

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