"Earth Simulator System" Achieves World's Top Computing Efficiency on the LINPACK Benchmark
NEC Corporation today announced that the renewed "Earth Simulator System," which NEC deployed for the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (President: Yasuhiro Kato, Hereinafter: JAMSTEC), an independent administrative organization, on March 1, 2009, achieved sustained performance of 122.4 TFLOPS (*1, TERAFLOPS) and computing efficiency (*2) of 93.38% on the LINPACK Benchmark (*3).
The system secured Japan's No.1 sustained
performance position (No.16 worldwide) and achieved the world's top
position in terms of computing efficiency according to the "TOP500
Supercomputing Sites," published in November 2008.
The renewed
Earth Simulator System is a large-scale vector supercomputer that
consists of 160 nodes of NEC's SX-9/E and boasts peak performance of
131 TFLOPS. This vector supercomputer is equipped with a high
performance CPU (102.4 GFLOPS), which is ranked the world's fastest CPU
currently operating. The system's scores were achieved through
large-scale shared memory, high speed data transfer between the CPU and
memory, and an ultra high speed network connecting nodes, in addition
to the CPU's performance.
The performance of the renewed Earth
Simulator System enables greater accuracy and understanding in the
provision of advanced warnings for complex phenomenon that include
global warming, air and ocean pollution, the El Nino effect, severe
rainfall, hurricane movement forecasts and others. The system is also
expected to contribute to greater Japanese economic activity, the
resolution of environmental issues and the understanding of changes in
the Earth's crust and earthquake occurrences.
Looking forward,
NEC will continue to strengthen the development of advanced performance
vector supercomputers while also providing customers with optimal
systems through scalar supercomputers and PC cluster systems.