RIKEN MDGRAPE-3
MDGRAPE-3 is an ultra-high performance petascale supercomputer system developed by the Riken research institute in Japan . It is a special purpose system built for molecular dynamics simulations, especially protein structure prediction.[1]
MDGRAPE-3 consists of 201 units of 24 custom MDGRAPE-3 chips (4,824 total), plus additional dual-core Intel Xeon processors (codename "Dempsey") which serve as host machines.
In June 2006 Riken announced its completion,[2] achieving the petaFLOPS level of floating point arithmetic performance.[2] This was more than three times faster than the 2006 version of the IBM Blue Gene/L system, which then led the TOP500 list of supercomputers at 0.28 petaFLOPS. Because it's not a general-purpose machine capable of running the LINPACK benchmarks, MDGRAPE-3 does not qualify for the TOP500 list.
See also
References
- ↑ Carey, Bjorn (2006), "Overachievers We Love - Faster", Popular Science 269 (6): 24
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Riken press release, Completion of a one-petaflops computer system for simulation of molecular dynamics
- Makoto Taiji, "MDGRAPE-3 chip: A 165-Gflops application-specific LSI for Molecular Dynamics Simulations", 16th IEEE Hot Chips Symposium, August 2004. [1]
External links
- MD-GRAPE Project@IBM
- High-Performance Molecular Simulation Team@Riken
- Peta Computing Institute
- Tetsu Narumi's MDGRAPE page
- Molecular Dynamics Machine using MDGRAPE-2
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RIKEN MDGRAPE-3.
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