Floating point operations per second: Difference between revisions

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In June 2019, [[Summit (supercomputer)|Summit]], an IBM-built supercomputer now running at the Department of Energy's (DOE) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), captured the number one spot with a performance of 148.6 petaFLOPS on High Performance Linpack (HPL), the benchmark used to rank the TOP500 list. Summit has 4,356 nodes, each one equipped with two 22-core Power9 CPUs, and six NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPUs.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.top500.org/lists/2018/06/ |title=June 2018 |website=Top500.org |access-date=2018-07-17 }}</ref>
 
In June 2022, the United States' [[Frontier (supercomputer)|Frontier]] iswas the most powerful supercomputer on TOP500, reaching 1102 petaFlops (1.102 exaFlops) on the LINPACK benchmarks.
<ref>{{cite web | url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOP500 | title=TOP500 }}</ref>
 
In November 2024, the United States’ [[El Capitan (supercomputer)|El Capitan]] [[Exascale computing|exascale]] [[supercomputer]], hosted at the [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]] in [[Livermore, California|Livermore]], displaced Frontier as the [[TOP500|world's fastest supercomputer]] in the 64th edition of the [[TOP500|Top500 (Nov 2024)]].
 
===Distributed computing records===