What is the Super Computer - Ep.01
A supercomputer is a computer with
a high level of performance as compared to a general-purpose computer. The
performance of a supercomputer is commonly measured in floating-point operations
per second (FLOPS)
instead of million instructions per second (MIPS).
Since 2017, there are supercomputers which can perform over a hundred quadrillion FLOPS (petaFLOPS). Since
November 2017, all of the world's fastest 500 supercomputers run Linux-based operating
systems.[4] Additional
research is being conducted in China, the United States,
the European Union, Taiwan and Japan to build
faster, more powerful and technologically superior exascale supercomputers.
Supercomputers play an important role in the field of computational science, and are used for a wide
range of computationally intensive tasks in various fields, including quantum
mechanics, weather forecasting, climate research, oil and gas exploration, molecular modeling (computing the
structures and properties of chemical compounds, biological macromolecules,
polymers, and crystals), and physical simulations (such as simulations of the
early moments of the universe, airplane and spacecraft aerodynamics,
the detonation of nuclear weapons, and nuclear fusion).
They have been essential in the field of cryptanalysis.
Supercomputers were introduced in the 1960s, and for several
decades the fastest were made by Seymour Cray at Control Data Corporation (CDC), Cray Research and
subsequent companies bearing his name or monogram. The first such machines were
highly tuned conventional designs that ran faster than their more
general-purpose contemporaries. Through the decade, increasing amounts of parallelism were added, with one to
four processors being typical. From the
1970s, vector processors operating on large
arrays of data came to dominate. A notable example is the highly
successful Cray-1 of
1976. Vector computers remained the dominant design into the 1990s. From then
until today, massively parallel supercomputers
with tens of thousands of off-the-shelf processors became the norm.
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