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(ATS-1)
 
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{{sc title|Trinity (ATS-1)}}
 
{{sc title|Trinity (ATS-1)}}
{{supercomputer}}
+
{{supercomputer
 +
|name=Trinity
 +
|sponsor=U.S. Department of Energy
 +
|designer=Intel
 +
|operator=Los Alamos National Laboratory
 +
|introduction=June 2015
 +
|peak dpflops=40 petaFLOPS
 +
|price=$174,000,000
 +
|predecessor=Cielo
 +
|predecessor link=supercomputers/cielo
 +
|successor=Crossroads
 +
|successor link=supercomputers/ats-3
 +
}}
 
'''Trinity''' ('''ATS-1''') is the successor to {{\\|Cielo}}, an 14.1-petaFLOPS  [[supercomputer]] by the [[DoE]] [[Los Alamos National Laboratory]]. Trinity is expected to be succeeded by {{\\|Crossroads}} in 2021.
 
'''Trinity''' ('''ATS-1''') is the successor to {{\\|Cielo}}, an 14.1-petaFLOPS  [[supercomputer]] by the [[DoE]] [[Los Alamos National Laboratory]]. Trinity is expected to be succeeded by {{\\|Crossroads}} in 2021.

Revision as of 15:05, 7 May 2019

Edit Values
Trinity
General Info
SponsorsU.S. Department of Energy
DesignersIntel
OperatorsLos Alamos National Laboratory
IntroductionJune 2015
Peak FLOPS40 petaFLOPS
Price$174,000,000
Succession

Trinity (ATS-1) is the successor to Cielo, an 14.1-petaFLOPS supercomputer by the DoE Los Alamos National Laboratory. Trinity is expected to be succeeded by Crossroads in 2021.

designerIntel +
introductory dateJune 2015 +
nameTrinity +
operatorLos Alamos National Laboratory +
peak flops (double-precision)4.0e+16 FLOPS (40,000,000,000,000 KFLOPS, 40,000,000,000 MFLOPS, 40,000,000 GFLOPS, 40,000 TFLOPS, 40 PFLOPS, 0.04 EFLOPS, 4.0e-5 ZFLOPS) +
release price$ 174,000,000.00 (€ 156,600,000.00, £ 140,940,000.00, ¥ 17,979,420,000.00) +
sponsorUnited States Department of Energy (DOE) +