LLNL’s El Capitan debuted on new Top500 list of world’s most powerful supercomputers (2024)

Three new systems currently or soon-to-be sited at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) on Monday debuted on the latest Top500 list of most powerful supercomputers in the world, including the first portion of the exascale machine El Capitan.

Unveiled at the International Supercomputing Conference in Hamburg, Germany, the June 2024 Top500 lists three systems with identical components — one computing rack each from El Capitan’s “Early Delivery System” (EDS), LLNL’s newest unclassified supercomputer RZAdams and its unclassified “sister” system Tuolumne. All three registered 19.65 petaFLOPs (nearly 20 quadrillion floating point calculations per second) on the High Performance Linpack (HPL) benchmark used by the Top500 organization to determine the world’s fastest supercomputers. The scores ranked them 46th, 47th and 48th in the world, respectively.

Each machine comprises the same direct liquid cooled HPE Cray EX supercomputer from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), featuring AMD architecture and nodes. The compute nodes are powered by the cutting-edge AMD InstinctTM MI300A accelerated processing units (APUs), which integrate a tightly coupled central processing unit (CPU) and graphics processing unit (GPU) into a single package.

The APUs are expected to provide exceptional floating-point performance and artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted data analysis for the power required, enabling scientists from the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA's) Tri-Labs (LLNL, Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories) to run high-resolution 3D models quicker and repeatedly, making those complex multi-physics simulations both routine and truer to life.

LLNL brought the El Capitan EDS cabinet online as part of the overall installation process of NNSA’s first exascale supercomputer El Capitan, which is projected to exceed 2 double precision exaFLOPs (2 quintillion operations per second) of peak performance, making it likely the world’s most powerful supercomputer when fully deployed. The EDS result constitutes an early test of El Capitan’s performance. Installation of El Capitan’s compute nodes began in March and remains ongoing, keeping the machine on schedule for initial use by NNSA Tri-Lab application teams later this year.

“We’re excited to be making significant progress on El Capitan and moving a step closer to harnessing the extraordinary power of NNSA’s first exascale supercomputer here at LLNL,” said LLNL Weapon Simulation and Computing Associate Director Rob Neely. “This is a tangible sign of advancement towards the promise of groundbreaking achievements in scientific research and national security, and we remain on track for deployment as a critical resource for the NNSA Tri-Labs beginning this fall.”

El Capitan will be used by the Tri-Labs for applications supporting NNSA’s stockpile modernization programs, as well as its stewardship mission to ensure the safety, security and reliability of the nation’s enduring nuclear stockpile in the absence of underground nuclear testing. It also will spur advancements in inertial confinement fusion energy, high energy density physics, material discovery, nuclear data, material equations of state and conventional weapon design.

Over the coming months, LLNL will complete installation of the remaining compute nodes and equipment, run a rigorous series of hardware, software, and system tests and formally accept the system.

As El Capitan’s largest unclassified companion system, Tuolumne shares the same architecture and APUs as El Capitan but is a fraction of the exascale machine’s size. Production on Tuolumne (named after a river and a meadow in Yosemite National Park), began in late February at HPE’s Chippewa Falls facility. It is expected to be delivered to LLNL and deployed later this year, at roughly the same time as El Capitan, where it will support open science projects in material discovery, energy security, climate change, drug discovery, inertial confinement fusion, astrophysics and other areas of public interest.

The third new system on the list, RZAdams, is a recently deployed unclassified system sited at LLNL. With compute nodes and infrastructure identical to El Capitan’s, the 19.65 PF peak performance benchmark makes it LLNL’s most capable unclassified machine, placing just ahead of Sierra’s companion Lassen.

Funded by LLNL, RZAdams was released to NNSA Tri-Lab users earlier this year, where it has been leveraged by application teams for critical software development and testing of a subset of the applications and libraries that will eventually run on El Capitan. One of the applications is MARBL, where it has been successfully used to model inertial confinement fusion experiments conducted at LLNL’s National Ignition Facility. RZAdams represents the Tri-Lab’s most powerful platform currently available to users for code porting and initial optimization for El Capitan.

"RZAdams is a critical addition to LLNL's existing and highly capable unclassified computing ecosystem,” said LLNL’s Chief Technology Officer for Livermore Computing Bronis R. de Supinski. “Given the boost in performance we are already seeing from the AMD Instinct MI300A APUs, we expect this system to be a strategically significant resource and to move us forward across a wide range of scientific areas. RZAdams is supporting essential opportunities for code porting, optimization and software development for some of the applications that will eventually run on El Capitan. It is also allowing our scientists to push the boundaries of discovery with greater speed and efficiency than previous unclassified systems.”

The addition of the three systems brings the total number of Top500 supercomputers sited or soon to be sited at LLNL to 14, far and away the most of any known computing institution in the world.

The No. 1 system in the world remains Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s exascale machine Frontier, which slightly raised its benchmark HPL score from the November 2023 list to 1.206 exaFLOPs. Argonne National Laboratory’s Aurora also officially became the world’s second exascale supercomputer, placing No. 2 on the list and reaching 1.012 EFs on the HPL.

For more, visit Top500.org

AMD, the AMD logo, AMD Instinct, and combinations thereof are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

LLNL’s El Capitan debuted on new Top500 list of world’s most powerful supercomputers (2024)

FAQs

Which is the most powerful supercomputer in the world? ›

Since June 2022, the United States' Frontier is the most powerful supercomputer on TOP500, reaching 1102 petaFlops (1.102 exaFlops) on the LINPACK benchmarks.

What is El Capitan supercomputer? ›

Hewlett Packard Enterprise El Capitan, is an upcoming exascale supercomputer, hosted at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, United States and projected to become operational in 2024.

What will El Capitan be used for? ›

El Capitan's purpose

El Capitan will ensure the safety, security, and reliability of the nation's nuclear stockpile in the absence of underground testing. It will be essential for the design and stewardship of a modernized stockpile and other critical national security missions.

Which processor does the number 1 supercomputer on the current TOP500 list use? ›

Housed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Tennessee, USA, Frontier leads the pack with an HPL score of 1.194 EFlop/s – unchanged from the June 2023 list. Frontier utilizes AMD EPYC 64C 2GHz processors and is based on the latest HPE Cray EX235a architecture.

Which supercomputer is faster than the human brain? ›

While today's most powerful supercomputer, Frontier, matches the Human Brain computing power, it consumes million times more energy! It is an apples to oranges comparison, as they process information differently. Nonetheless, the Human Brain processing power has been estimated at 1 exaflops, about the same as Frontier.

What is the fastest supercomputer in 2024? ›

May 13, 2024 — The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Aurora supercomputer has officially broken the exascale barrier.

Can El Capitan run steam? ›

On September 1 2023, Steam will officially stop supporting macOS versions 10.11 ("El Capitan") and 10.12 ("Sierra"). After that date, the Steam Client will no longer run on those versions of macOS.

Is El Capitan 32 or 64 bit? ›

OS X now exclusively uses a 64-bit kernel, but it continues to run both 32-bit and 64-bit applications. With its 64-bit kernel, OS X is able to address large amounts of physical RAM. OS X El Capitan has been tested to support up to 128GB of physical RAM on qualified Mac computers.

Who owns the world's fastest supercomputer? ›

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Frontier, or OLCF-5, is the world's first exascale supercomputer. It is hosted at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF) in Tennessee, United States and became operational in 2022. As of December 2023, Frontier is the world's fastest supercomputer.

What is the smartest computer in the world? ›

Currently top of the list, Frontier — built by supercomputing giant HPE Cray — became the first exascale computer in the world when it went online in 2022.

What is the current fastest computer in the world? ›

1 for the fifth time, Frontier, the HPE-built exascale system for Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) remains the fastest supercomputer in the world.

What is more powerful than a supercomputer? ›

Quantum computers are much faster and more powerful than supercomputers. They can process multiple computations simultaneously which makes them ideal for tackling complex problems that require massive amounts of data to be processed quickly.

What is NASA's most powerful supercomputer? ›

Aitken's initial module and racks containing Intel Xeon Gold "Cascade Lake" nodes were installed in 2019. Since then, the system has been expanded with 16 racks containing AMD "Rome" nodes and four racks of AMD "Milan" nodes—making Aitken NASA's most powerful supercomputer.

What is the most powerful CPU ever? ›

The Intel Core i9-14900KS is a special edition in the 14th-Gen processor family that has been engineered to push the limits of computing power. Thanks to Intel's Thermal Velocity Boost technology, it achieves a record-breaking turbo frequency of up to 6.2 GHz out of the box.

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