Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Tennessee has announced plans, via X/Twitter, to retire its Summit supercomputer in November 2024. After six years of service and over 200 million node ...
Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s (ORNL) Summit supercomputer is set to be decommissioned in November this year, after serving ...
Researchers from the University of Washington, Seattle, or UW, and Los Alamos National Laboratory used the Summit ...
Nuclear fission has powered our world and medical advancements for decades. What exactly happens when an atom's nucleus splits into two parts?
The team's simulation consumed nearly 1 million node-hours on the Summit supercomputer. Their focus was on the "neck rupture," the final stage of fission where the nucleus stretches and ultimately ...
SLAC is leading a project using the Summit supercomputer to build a new network that will enable artificial intelligence and machine learning to steer experiments and analyze data faster and more ...
The team's numerical simulation required the entirety of Summit for almost 1 million node-hours ... been superseded by the OLCF's exascale-class supercomputer, Frontier. The team's calculations ...
The hunt for a cure against coronavirus needed to speed up — and the world’s fastest supercomputer delivered. IBM’s massive machine, dubbed Summit, was able to identify 77 unique chemicals ...
The Framingham, Massachusetts-based biotech has teamed up with the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory to harness its Summit supercomputer – originally developed by IBM – in ...
The Summit supercomputer is housed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. China has been pushed into third place on a list of the world's most powerful supercomputers. The latest list ...
Gluons glue quarks together. Using 4,608 nodes, Summit is more than five times faster than the previous-generation Titan supercomputer system at Oak Ridge. In Summit, each node contains multiple ...