World's fastest open-science supercomputer completed
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 
                Titan supercomputer
     
    
        Titan, the world’s fastest open-science supercomputer, was completed this month at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee
        
Titan’s peak performance is more than 20 petaflops – or 20  million billion floating-point operations per second – about 90 per cent  of which comes from 18,688 NVIDIA Tesla K20 GPU accelerators.
These  are based on the NVIDIA Kepler architecture, the fastest, most  efficient, highest-performance computing architecture ever built.
Researchers  use ever faster supercomputers to accelerate the pace of discovery and  innovation across a range of scientific fields of inquiry – from  developing more efficient engines and higher capacity, lighter weight  batteries, to studying climate change and finding cures for disease.
Titan is a milestone on the path to exascale computing, which targets building a 1,000 petaflops supercomputer.
Titan  is operated by Oak Ridge National Laboratory, part of the U.S.  Department of Energy’s network of research labs, as an open-science  system.
This means it is available to researchers from academia,  government laboratories, and a broad range of industries, who will use  Titan to model physical and biological phenomena and seek breakthroughs  faster than possible by experimentation alone.
Supported by the  energy efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the Tesla K20 GPU, Titan is  more than 10 times faster and five times more energy efficient than its  predecessor, the 2.3-petaflops Jaguar system, while occupying the same  floor space.
Had Oak Ridge upgraded Jaguar by simply expanding its  CPU-based architecture, the system would be more than four times its  current size and consume more than 30 megawatts of power.
“Basing  Titan on Tesla GPUs allows Oak Ridge to run phenomenally complex  applications at scale, and validates the use of accelerated computing to  address our most pressing scientific problems,” said Steve Scott, chief  technology officer of the GPU Accelerated Computing business at NVIDIA.
“You simply can’t get these levels of performance, power- and cost-efficiency with conventional CPU-based architectures.
"Accelerated computing is the best and most realistic approach to enable exascale performance levels within the next decade.”
Titan  development began three years ago with Oak Ridge’s decision to upgrade  Jaguar, the previous open science system leader and a former world No. 1  most powerful supercomputer.
The upgrade includes the Tesla K20  GPU accelerators, a replacement of the compute modules to convert the  system’s 200 cabinets to a Cray XK7 supercomputer, and 710 terabytes of  memory.
“Science and technology have always been our primary goal,  and Titan is a groundbreaking tool that will allow researchers  worldwide to leverage GPU-accelerated computing to make unparalleled  breakthroughs,” said Jeff Nichols, associate laboratory director for  computing and computational sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
“The  new Tesla GPU accelerators offer the performance and energy efficiency  that enable Titan to scale to unprecedented performance levels without  consuming the energy equivalent of a small city.”