AMD, HPE win $600 mn deal to supply supercomputer

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) have won a $600 million deal to supply a supercomputer to the U.S. Department of Energy’s nuclear security arm to support the nation’s nuclear arsenal.

The computer, dubbed El Capitan after the famous rock face in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, will be housed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It will also be used by the nation’s other two national nuclear labs, Sandia National Laboratories and Los Alamos National Laboratory.

The awarding of the chip contract to AMD is a big win for the company.

All but one of the world’s current top 10 fastest supercomputers use central processor chips from either Intel or International Business Machines (IBM), according to supercomputing research group TOP500, Reuters reported. The exception is the third-fastest, which is located in China and uses a domestically developed chip.

Since the end of live detonation tests, using computers to simulate nuclear blasts has become a core part of weapons design. The enormous computing power required has also become a source of international competition and tension.

Of the world’s four fastest supercomputers, two are located in the United States and two are located in China, according to TOP500.

United States officials have barred U.S. firms from doing business with some Chinese supercomputer groups that U.S. officials say have Chinese military ties.

The companies and the government said El Capitan is likely to be 30 percent faster than previously expected thanks to the use of AMD’s forthcoming “Genoa” central processor units, or CPUs.

El Capitan will also use four AMD graphical processing units, or GPUs, for each CPU chip to speed up artificial intelligence tasks, they said.

HPE said it expects to deliver El Capitan in 2023. If it works as predicted, the machine will have a speed of 2 exaflops, meaning it will be able to perform 1 quintillion – or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 – calculations per second and would be faster than the current top 200 supercomputers in the world combined. Intel and Cray last year announced a supercomputer designed to run at 1 exaflop.

El Capitan will ensure the laboratories can excel at their national security missions and make it possible for the U.S. to remain competitive on the global stage in high performance computing for many years to come,” Bill Goldstein, director of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, said in a statement.

Energy Department officials announced last year they had awarded the El Capitan project to Cray, which is owned by HPE, but did not say who would supply the chips.

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