| Active | From 2021 | 
|---|---|
| Sponsors | United States Department of Energy | 
| Operators | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | 
| Location | National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center | 
| Architecture | Nvidia A100 GPUs, AMD Milan CPU | 
| Operating system | Custom Linux-based kernel | 
| Memory | 256 GiB/node | 
| Storage | 35 PB, 5 TB/s Shared all-flash Lustre Filesystem[1] | 
| Purpose | Nuclear fusion simulations, climate projections, material and biological research and computational cosmology | 
| Website | www | 
Perlmutter (also known as NERSC-9) is a supercomputer delivered to the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center of the United States Department of Energy as the successor to Cori.[2] It is being built by Cray and is based on their Shasta architecture which utilizes Zen 3 based AMD Epyc CPUs ("Milan") and next-generation Nvidia Tesla GPUs. Its intended use-cases are nuclear fusion simulations, climate projections and material and biological research.[3] Phase 1, completed 27 May 2022,[4] reached 70.9 PFLOPS of processing power.[5]
It is named in honour of Nobel prize winner Saul Perlmutter.[2]
References
- ↑ "NERSC finalizes contract for Perlmutter supercomputer". Datacenter Dynamics. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
- 1 2 Moss, Sebastian. "Lawrence Berkeley to install Perlmutter supercomputer featuring Cray's Shasta system". Data Centre Dynamics. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
- ↑ "GPUs to Power Perlmutter, NERSC's New Supercomputer - NVIDIA Blog". 30 October 2018.
- ↑ "Berkeley Lab Deploys Next-Gen Supercomputer, Perlmutter, Bolstering U.S. Scientific Research". NeRSC. 27 May 2022.
- ↑ "Perlmutter". NeRSC.
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