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Originally announced in April [[2015]], Aurora was planned to be delivered in [[2018]] and have a peak performance of 180 [[petaFLOPS]]. The system was expected to be the world's most powerful system at the time. The system was intended to be built by Cray based on Intel's 3rd generation {{intel|Xeon Phi}} ({{intel|Knights Hill|l=arch}} microarchitecture). In November 2017 Intel announced that Aurora has been shifted to 2021 and will be scaled up to 1 [[exaFLOPS]]. The system will likely become the first supercomputer in the United States to break the exaFLOPS barrier. As part of the announcement {{intel|Knights Hill|l=arch}} was canceled and instead be replaced by a "new platform and new microarchitecture specifically designed for exascale". | Originally announced in April [[2015]], Aurora was planned to be delivered in [[2018]] and have a peak performance of 180 [[petaFLOPS]]. The system was expected to be the world's most powerful system at the time. The system was intended to be built by Cray based on Intel's 3rd generation {{intel|Xeon Phi}} ({{intel|Knights Hill|l=arch}} microarchitecture). In November 2017 Intel announced that Aurora has been shifted to 2021 and will be scaled up to 1 [[exaFLOPS]]. The system will likely become the first supercomputer in the United States to break the exaFLOPS barrier. As part of the announcement {{intel|Knights Hill|l=arch}} was canceled and instead be replaced by a "new platform and new microarchitecture specifically designed for exascale". | ||
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| Fabric || 2nd Generation Intel Omni-Path Architecture with silicon photonics | | Fabric || 2nd Generation Intel Omni-Path Architecture with silicon photonics | ||
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− | + | | File System Capacity || >150 PB Lustre | |
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− | | File System Capacity || >150 | ||
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| Peak Power || 13 MW | | Peak Power || 13 MW | ||
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Facts about "Aurora - Supercomputers"
designer | Intel + and Cray + |
introductory date | 2021 + |
main image | + |
name | Aurora + |
operator | Argonne Leadership Computing Facility + |
release price | $ 600,000,000.00 (€ 540,000,000.00, £ 486,000,000.00, ¥ 61,998,000,000.00) + |
sponsor | United States Department of Energy (DOE) + |