Trinity (supercomputer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CostUS$174M[1]
PurposePrimarily utilized to perform milestone weapons calculations
Trinity
OperatorsNational Nuclear Security Administration
LocationLos Alamos National Laboratory
CostUS$174M[1]
PurposePrimarily utilized to perform milestone weapons calculations
Websitelanl.gov/projects/trinity/

Trinity (or ATS-1) is a United States supercomputer built by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) for the Advanced Simulation and Computing Program (ASC).[2] The aim of the ASC program is to simulate, test, and maintain the United States nuclear stockpile.

  • Trinity succeeded Cielo
  • December 2013, The National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) and The Alliance for Computing at Extreme Scale (ACES) releases a joint RFP with technical requirements for Trinity.[3]
  • July 2014, Cray announces that they were awarded the $174 Million contract by the National Nuclear Security Administration to provide a next generation supercomputer to Los Alamos National Laboratory.[1]
  • June 2015, Haswell Partition installation begins.[4]
  • November 2015, Trinity appears on the Supercomputing Top500 list at #6.[5]
  • June 2016, Knights Landing Partition installation begins.[6]
  • November 2016, Trinity falls to #10 on the Top500 list.[7]
  • July 2017, The Haswell and KNL partitions are merged.[4]
  • November 2018, Trinity regains #6 spot on the Top500 list.[8]
  • December 2020, Trinity falls to #13 on the Top500 list.[9]
  • Trinity's successor will be Crossroads.

Trinity technical specifications

Trinity High-Level Technical Specifications [10]
Operational Lifetime 2015 to 2020
Architecture Cray XC40
Memory Capacity 2.07 PiB
Peak Performance 41.5 PF/s
Number of Compute Nodes 19,420
Parallel File System Capacity 78 PB (69 PiB)
Burst Buffer Capacity 3.7 PB
Footprint 4606 sq ft
power requirement 8.6 MW

Compute Tier

Trinity was built in 2 stages. The first stage incorporated the Intel Xeon Haswell processor while the second stage added a significant performance increase using the Intel Xeon Phi Knights Landing Processor. There are 301,952 Haswell and 678,912 Knights Landing processors in the combined system, yielding a total peak performance of over 40 PF/s (petaflops)[4]

Storage Tiers

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI