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Highlights:
- Offers scalable HPC power for complex, general-purpose science applications
- Delivers high bandwidth, low latency performance for data-intensive applications
- Helps reduce TCO, with lower energy consumption and a smaller footprint
Blue Gene/Q Fastest Supercomputer in the World
On June 18, an IBM Blue Gene/Q system received top honors as being the fastest supercomputer in the world as recorded by top500.org. Four of the top ten supercomputers are Blue Gene/Q systems. Blue Gene/Q systems also captured the top 20 spots of the most energy efficient systems in the world as measured by the greeen500.org ranking.
Our balanced approach to design enables delivery of high performance and energy efficient solutions to support breakthroughs in areas like life sciences, public safety and transportation that will make our world smarter.
Breakthrough science today—not tomorrow
Whether your work involves climate modeling, nuclear simulations or life sciences research and development, you have something in common: you work with huge data sets and need massive computing power without breaking the bank on energy costs. With IBM® Systems Blue Gene®/Q, completing computationally intensive projects for a wide variety of scientific applications that were previously unsolvable is not just possible, it is now probable.
Blue Gene/Q introduces innovative technologies to deliver exceptional performance, energy efficiency and ease of application portability. It reflects a key step in the ongoing evolution of Blue Gene supercomputers. An array of technical innovations in hardware, software and system design will enable Blue Gene/Q to achieve new levels of performance and energy efficiency while helping to simplify application portability and usability. By providing speed and bandwidth to keep platforms operating at the forefront of technology, Blue Gene/Q can help you accelerate leading-edge science to transform your scientific and research agendas.
Blue Gene/Q is specifically designed to help solve large-scale problems associated with the sciences. The third generation in the Blue Gene family of supercomputers, it works at an order of magnitude faster than previous systems, with 16 cores and a scalable peak performance up to 100 petaflops—a massive leap forward in parallel computing power. Applicable to a growing set of computationally intensive workloads within the scientific community, Blue Gene/Q is the ideal platform for highly complex projects in a broad range of areas.
| Feature | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Each rack of Blue Gene/Q with 1,024 16-core compute nodes scales to 209 TFps peak, scalable to 512 racks |
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| Lightweight Compute Node Kernel (CNK) with Linux and POSIX compatibility, plus full Fortran, C, C++ compiler |
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| Engineered with fewer moving parts and redundancy |
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| Integrated and optimized management and monitoring tools |
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| Densely packaged with highly efficient water cooling |
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IBM System Blue Gene/Q at a glance
| System configurations | |
|---|---|
| Processor | IBM PowerPC® A2 1.6 GHz, 16 cores per node |
| Memory | 16 GB SDRAM-DDR3 per node (1333 MTps) |
| Networks | 5D Torus — 40 GBps; 2.5 μsec latency Collective network — part of the 5D Torus; collective logic operations supported Global Barrier/Interrupt — part of 5D Torus PCIe x8 Gen2 based I/O 1 GB Control Network — System Boot, Debug, Monitoring |
| I/O Nodes (10 GbE or InfiniBand) | 16-way SMP processor; configurable in 8,16 or 32 I/O nodes per rack |
| Operating systems | Compute nodes — lightweight proprietary kernel |
| Power | Typical 80 kW per rack (estimated) 380-415, 480 VAC 3-phase; maximum 100 kW per rack; 4x60 amp service per rack |
| Cooling | 90% water cooling (18-25°C, maximum 30 GPM); 10% air cooling |
| Acoustics | 7.9 bels |
| Dimensions | Height: 2095 mm Width: 1219 mm Depth: 1321 mm Weight: 4500 lbs with coolant (LLNL 1 IO drawer configuration) Service clearances: 914 mm on all sides |
Nov 15, 2011
IBM Announces Supercomputer to Propel Sciences Forward
Oct 25, 2011
Rensselaer Orders Up Blue Gene/Q for Exascale and Data-Intensive Research
Aug 22, 2011
IBM's BlueGene/Q super chip grows 18th core
Aug 2011
Interview with Jean-Yves Berthou, EDF
Jun 30, 2011
LLNL Opens HPC Innovation Center for Collaboration with Industry
Jun 27, 2011
Blue Gene Sniffs for Black Gold in the Cloud
May 2011
Supercomputing: Now there’s an app for that!
Feb 8, 2011
July 14, 2009
In Search for Intelligence, a Silicon Brain Twitches
Feb 18, 2009
Feb 10, 2009
New IBM Petaflop BG/P at FZJ to Be Europe's Most Powerful
Feb 3, 2009
20 Petaflop Sequoia Supercomputer
Dec 8, 2008
IBM's Infinite Research Problem
Oct 23, 2008
Oct 7, 2008
Daresbury Laboratory Chooses TotalView® for Application Development on the Blue Gene®/P
Oct 3, 2008
Austin Daily Herald: Hormel Institute dedication today
Governor, Mayo CEO, Hormel heir will be in attendance
Oct 2, 2008
Post-Bulletin: Hormel Institute highlights Rochester connections
By Karen Colbenson
White papers
- Introduction to Blue Gene/Q @ SC11 (1.40MB)
- Learn more about the network interconnect and messaging architecture of BG/Q (2.43MB)
- A review of the the Blue Gene/Q Compute Chip (636KB)
- Use of SLURM Scheduler on BG/Q (266KB)
- Sequoia Update SCICOMP May 11, 2011 (2.70MB)
- Optimizing the Performance of Streaming Numerical Kernels on IBM BlueGene (849KB)
- Blue Gene workloads as part of the 2011 Department of Energy INCITE Program (2.45MB)
- Novel techniques for Reverse Time Migration Using Blue Gene (2.02MB)
- White Paper describing IBM's novel approach for Fast Scalable Reverse Time Migration Seismic Imaging on Blue Gene/P (1.49MB)
- Use Case Scenario: CFD code Nektar on Blue Gene/Q (128KB)
- High Throughput Computing on IBM's Blue Gene®/P (683KB)
- System Level Accelerators: A Hybrid Computing Solution
- High Throughput Computing Validation for Drug Discovery Using the DOCK Program on a Massively Parallel System
- An Efficient Parallel Implementation of the Hidden Markov Methods for Genomic Sequence-Search on a Massively Parallel System
- The Anomalous Behavior of the Dielectric Constant of Hafnium Silicates: A First Principles Study (231KB)
- Life Sciences Molecular Dynamics Applications on the IBM System Blue Gene Solution: Performance Overview (32KB)
- Large Scale Drop Impact Analysis of Mobile Phone Using ADVC on Blue Gene (PDF, 916KB)
