Trinity (supercomputer)
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LocationLos Alamos National Laboratory
CostUS$174M[1]
PurposePrimarily utilized to perform milestone weapons calculations
| Operators | National Nuclear Security Administration |
|---|---|
| Location | Los Alamos National Laboratory |
| Cost | US$174M[1] |
| Purpose | Primarily utilized to perform milestone weapons calculations |
| Website | lanl |
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]
