China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tianhe-3 to offer faster, sharper data processing

- By ZHANG MIN in Tianjin andMASI in Beijing Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn and zhangmin@ chinadaily.com.cn

China is stepping up research and developmen­t of the Tianhe-3 supercompu­ter, which aims to be 10 times faster than the current world leader, as it strives to meet the country’s growing needs for more accurate and efficient computing capabiliti­es.

The Tianhe-3 is designed as the world’s first prototype exascale supercompu­ter, which means it can make a quintillio­n (1 followed by 18 zeros) calculatio­ns per second, and is intended to arm the country’s manufactur­ers and government with greater speed, precision and scope for research.

The supercompu­ter will be applied in such fields as the analysis of smog distributi­on, airplane designs, oil surveying and the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce.

These functions overlap with the nation’s existing supercompu­ters, such as the Sunway TaihuLight, which is currently the world’s fastest supercompu­ter, with a peak speed of 125 quadrillio­n (1 followed by 15 zeros) calculatio­ns per second, said Meng Xiangfei, director of applicatio­n at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.

“What sets the Tianhe-3 apart from the others is, for example, that it can help design more reliable aircraft by giving a view of its detail at a magnificat­ion of up to 10 times,” Meng added.

He explained that when forecastin­g weather on a national scale, the measuring range of the Tianhe-3 can be as accurate as 1 square kilometer. That would be five to 10 times more accurate than other supercompu­ters.

“I think some weather forecastin­g applicatio­ns in smartphone­s will become more accurate by the time the Tianhe-3 is fully functionin­g,” said Meng, who confirmed the prototype is expected to be finished early next year and become fully operationa­l by 2020.

He said that the developmen­t of the Tianhe-3 differs from the Sunway TaihuLight in some quite significan­tways.

“To be specific, we are trying to make a ‘supercell’ which combines calculatio­n, communicat­ion, big data and AI, which used to work separately. That is why the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin has brought in a new batch of AI experts,” said Meng.

China is taking its computing power to the next level amid intensifyi­ng global competitio­n in this field.

The United States is working on an exascale supercompu­ter, but its prototype will not appear until 2023. Japan is building a machine that can make 130 quadrillio­n calculatio­ns per second, which could surpass Sunway TaihuLight.

Wang Gang, an associate professor at the College of Computer Science and Technology of Jilin University, said China’s supercompu­ters are chiefly used to assist scientific research, which need to process a huge amount of informatio­n within a short time span.

“But as the Tianhe-3 improves AI capabiliti­es, it will not only calculate faster but also smarter. It will therefore have greater potential in terms of commercial applicatio­n,” Wang said.

Wang is working on a deeplearni­ng project for autonomous driving. He has used the Sunway TaihuLight supercompu­ter to assist his research, and expects the Tianhe-3 to be more helpful.

“China has an edge in hardware, but more efforts are needed to develop tailor-made software for supercompu­ters, in order to widen its applicatio­n,” Wang said.

 ?? YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA ?? An engineer inspects the Tianhe-1 supercompu­ter at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.
YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA An engineer inspects the Tianhe-1 supercompu­ter at the National Supercompu­ter Center in Tianjin.

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