The new supercomputer, called Sequoia, will be housed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Like Roadrunner, the new machine is being developed for the US Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) "to help continue to ensure the safety and reliability of the nation's aging nuclear deterrent", IBM said in a statement.
IBM is delivering two systems of which the 20 petaflop Sequoia is the bigger. Delivery for that system, which is "based on future BlueGene technology", is scheduled to start in 2011 with deployment in 2012, the company said. Meanwhile, Dawn, a 500 teraflop computer is scheduled for delivery later this year and, according to IBM, will "lay the applications foundation for multi-petaflops computing with Sequoia".
With 1.6 petabytes of memory, 96 racks, 98,304 nodes and 1.6 million cores, Sequoia will be one of the largest and most complex computers ever built.
IBM said Sequoia will be focused on predictive simulation through running "very large suites of complex simulations called uncertainty quantification studies". It will also be used for weapons science calculations. These calculations will be necessary, IBM says, for the NNSA's Stockpile Stewardship programme, which is designed to help ensure the "safety, security and reliability" of the US government's nuclear weapons arsenal.
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