New 'Aurora' supercomputer poised to be fastest in U.S. history

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By Jaclyn Jeffrey-Wilensky

It’s as if millions of people in coffee shops across the United States were using their laptops to do mathematical calculations while sipping their lattes — more than a billion calculations a second for each person.

That’s how Rick Stevens, an associate director at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois, explains the unprecedented computational power of the lab’s new supercomputer. Dubbed Aurora, the $500-million device will be delivered to the lab in 2021, its creators announced Monday.

Aurora is being called the fastest supercomputer in U.S. history — and it may be one of the fastest in the world. It will give scientists a powerful new tool for research initiatives ranging from modeling climate change and discovering new cancer drugs to gaining a better understanding of the origins of the universe.

A joint venture by chipmaking giant Intel, supercomputer manufacturer Cray and the U.S. Department of Energy, Aurora will be the first so-called exascale computer in the U.S. That means it will be able to perform a quintillion calculations per second (in computer science parlance, that’s 1 exaFLOP, where FLOP stands for “floating point operations per second”).

source: nbcnews.com