China Daily

Supercompu­ter to hit 1-quintillio­n target

China’s supercompu­ter can achieve high speed ahead of US, Japan peers

- By YANG CHENG in Tianjin yangcheng@chinadaily.com.cn Zhang Zhihao contribute­d to the story.

Scientists have set an ambitious target for China’s Tianhe-3 supercompu­ter to meet by 2020, the goal of making a quintillio­n calculatio­ns per second.

The supercompu­ter is expected to hit the speed — which can also be expressed as a billion billions, or 1 followed by 18 zeros — ahead of the United States and Japan, where their supercompu­ter scientists are also beefing up efforts to meet the ambitious goal.

“We, however, aren’t just working for the great speed but aiming to help quench the country’s thirst in more fields in applicatio­ns with this speed,” said Meng Xiangfei, director of the applicatio­n department at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.

Wider applicatio­ns have surged including weather forecastin­g, disaster prevention, energy conservati­on, and medicines for epidemic outbreaks, to name a few, he said.

Currently 1,600 teams in 20 cities are working with the supercompu­ter on nearly 10,000 scientific research projects every day.

Tianhe-1 serves more than 1,600 research institutes and companies from more than 20 provinces and regions.

The Tianhe-1 has served 1,200 national-level key innovation projects and generated a combined economic return of up to 3 billion yuan ($459.2 million) for those entities.

Users are taking advantage of the massive computing power to scan the Earth for oil, create artificial nuclear fusion, and build airplanes and maritime equipment.

The supercompu­ter is now the driving force of the country’s innovation in the computer sector and plays an important role in the nation’s informatio­n security.

The developmen­t of the computer has undergone ups and downs.

For example, in 2015, the US banned the export of the chips for Tianhe, but China soon geared up its innovation and enhanced its competitiv­e edge to fulfill the need for top-level chips, central processing units and operating systems.

The ever escalating innovation in big data and artificial intelligen­ce in China will spur the further developmen­t of its supercompu­ter sector.

The supercompu­ter’s growth represents the country’s electronic informatio­n, integrated circuits, and chip and software sector.

The researcher said now the center is revving up the efforts to conduct research on the 2020 goal, tackling with the challenges of the supportive integrated circuits, chips and software and overall design.

Echoing Meng, Ding Nan, a scientist working for China’s fastest supercompu­ter, Sunway TaihuLight at the Nationcapi­tal

We, however, aren’t just working for the great speed but aiming to help quench the country’s thirst in more fields ...” Meng Xiangfei, director of the applicatio­n department at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin

al Super Computing Center in Wuxi, East China’s Jiangsu province, said Sunway TaihuLight is coping with the challenges of ever rising demand and the critical need is the software.

“If the memory scales up, the software in memory, applicatio­ns and security face strong challenges,” Ding said.

Ding said that Sunway TaihuLight has the capacity to overcome the barriers, as its technologi­es and software are entirely independen­tly developed.

Pan Jingshan, deputy head of the National Supercompu­ter Center in Jinan, of East China’s Shandong province, said the next generation of Sunway TaihuLight, the prototype of the Sunway Exascale Supercompu­ter will debut this year and is expected to see its speed hit 4-5 petaflops — 4-5 thousand trillions — per second.

China has taken the lead in the hardware of supercompu­ter and the software has also making headway. The country’s supercompu­ter now is confronted with two major obstacles, energy conservati­on and wider market applicatio­ns, Pan said.

In the future the exascale supercompu­ter with a speed of 1 quintillio­n calculatio­ns per second will consume 30-40 megawatts of energy per hour. The energy demand is a major obstacle hampering the supercompu­ter’s efficiency.

Pan said: “The major challenge as well as the value of supercompu­ter in China lie in its applicatio­n. To design state-of-the-art software to meet the calculatin­g demand is key to success.”

“Hefty investment is urged to be poured into the sector in a bid to boost the research to serve cutting edge research and developmen­t,” Pan said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Two engineers examine the equipment of Tianhe at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Two engineers examine the equipment of Tianhe at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong