Battling for tech supremacy
US supercomputer deemed fastest, but experts believe China has 2 speedier systems
The United States has regained a coveted speed crown in computing with a powerful new supercomputer in Tennessee, a milestone for the technology that plays a major role in science, medicine and other fields.
Frontier, the name of the massive machine at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, was declared this week to be the first to demonstrate performance of 1 quintillion operations per second — a billion billion calculations — in standard tests used by researchers to rank supercomputers. The U.S. Department of Energy several years ago pledged $1.8 billion to build three systems with that exascale performance, as scientists call it.
But some experts believe Frontier has been beaten in the exascale race by two systems in China.
Operators of those systems have not submitted test results for evaluation by scientists who oversee the so-called Top500 ranking. Experts said they suspect that tensions between the United States and China may be the reason the Chinese have not submitted the test results.
“There are rumors China has something,” said Jack Dongarra, a distinguished professor of computer science at the University of Tennessee who helps lead the Top500 effort. “There is nothing official.”
Supercomputers have long been a flashpoint in international competition. The room-size machines were first built for cracking codes and designing weapons, but now also play major roles in developing vaccines, testing car designs and modeling climate change.
The field was dominated by U.S. technology for decades, but China has become a dominant force. A system there called Sunway TaihuLight was ranked the world’s fastest from 2016 to 2018. China accounted for 173 systems on the latest Top500 list, compared with 126 machines in the United States.
Japan has been a smaller but still potent contender. A system called Fugaku, in Kobe, took the No. 1 spot in 2020, displacing an IBM system at Oak Ridge.
Frontier gives that top position back to the lab. The system, built by Hewlett Packard Enterprise using two kinds of chips from Advanced Micro Devices, was more than twice as fast as Fugaku in the tests used by the Top500 organization.
“It is a proud moment for our nation,” said Thomas Zacharia, director of Oak Ridge, at an online briefing from an industry event in Germany. “It reminds us we can still go after something that is bigger than us.”
Building the system, composed of 74 cabinets that each weighs 8,000 pounds, was made more difficult by the pandemic and the ongoing supply chain crisis, Zacharia said. But he predicted that Frontier would swiftly have a major impact in studying the impact of COVID-19 and aiding the transition to cleaner energy sources, for example.
Chinese researchers used to participate in the ranking process. But the country has adopted a lower profile in promoting its supercomputer progress as the United States has taken a series of steps to slow China’s technology advances — including by making it harder for some Chinese companies to acquire the foreign chips that can be used to make supercomputers.
The Oak Ridge machine, besides aiding scientists, could help suppliers popularize some new products.