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The most recent edition of TOP500 was published in November 2024 as the 64th edition of TOP500, while the next edition of TOP500 will be published in June 2025 as the 65th edition of TOP500. As of November 2024, the United States' El Capitan is the most powerful supercomputer in the TOP500, reaching 1742 petaFlops (1.742 exaFlops) on the ...
2020 Japan: RIKEN Center for Computational Science: Fujitsu: Fugaku: 415.53 PFLOPS* [40] 442.01 PFLOPS* 2022 United States: Oak Ridge National Laboratory: HPE Cray: Frontier: 1.102 EFLOPS* [41] 2023 1.194 EFLOPS* 2024 1.206 EFLOPS* Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: El Capitan: 1.742 EFLOPS* [42]
Quantum processors are difficult to compare due to the different architectures and approaches. Due to this, published physical qubit numbers do not reflect the performance levels of the processor. This is instead achieved through the number of logical qubits or benchmarking metrics such as quantum volume , randomized benchmarking or circuit ...
Aurora is an exascale supercomputer that was sponsored by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) and designed by Intel and Cray for the Argonne National Laboratory. [2] It was briefly the second fastest supercomputer in the world from November 2023 to June 2024.
1×10 18: Fugaku 2020 Japanese supercomputer in single precision mode [15] 1.1x10 18 : Frontier 2022 U.S. supercomputer 1.88×10 18 : U.S. Summit achieves a peak throughput of this many operations per second, whilst analysing genomic data using a mixture of numerical precisions.
[28] [29] Shipment of the equipment racks to the Riken facility began on December 2, 2019, [30] and was completed on May 13, 2020. [31] In June 2020, Fugaku became the fastest supercomputer in the world in the TOP500 list, displacing the IBM Summit. [7] Fugaku has been used for research on masks related to the COVID-19 pandemic. [32] [33]
As of November 2024, Frontier is the second fastest supercomputer in the world. It is based on the Cray EX and is the successor to Summit (OLCF-4). Frontier achieved an Rmax of 1.102 exaFLOPS , which is 1.102 quintillion floating-point operations per second, using AMD CPUs and GPUs .
March 26 – After one of the first and largest public volunteer distributed computing projects, SETI@home announced its shutdown by March 31, 2020, and due to heightened interest as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the distributed computing project Folding@home became the world's first system to reach one exaFLOPS.