Data & Analytics

Aurora Supercomputer Breaks Exascale Barrier

The new system at the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory achieved more than a quintillion calculations per second.

Image of both sides of a long row of wires and hardware within the Aurora supercomputer at Argonne National Laboratory.
Aurora’s exascale computing power is expected to provide researchers with advanced capabilities for simulations, artificial intelligence, and data analysis.
Source: Argonne National Laboratory

The Aurora supercomputer at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has officially surpassed the exascale threshold, measuring more than a quintillion calculations per second on the new Top500 list. The results were announced at the ISC High Performance 2024 conference in Hamburg, Germany.

In its latest submission to the semiannual list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers, Aurora registered 1.012 exaflops using 87% of the system’s 10,624 nodes. After making its Top500 debut in November 2023, the Argonne system retained its spot as the second fastest supercomputer and joined the DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Frontier as the world’s second exascale machine. Aurora also earned the top spot in a measure of artificial intelligence (AI) performance, achieving 10.6 exaflops on the HPL-MxP benchmark.

“We’re thrilled to see Aurora join the exascale club,” said Michael Papka, director of the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF), a DOE Office of Science user facility at Argonne. “I’m extremely proud of the Aurora team’s ongoing efforts to get the system up and running for the research community. We can’t wait to see what the full system will be capable of.”

As one of the world’s fastest supercomputers, Aurora is expected to give scientists a powerful new tool for carrying out research involving simulation, AI, and data analysis. The state-of-the-art system will not only enable breakthroughs in science and engineering but also spur new advances in technology and bolster the nation’s innovation infrastructure.

“Aurora is fundamentally transforming how we do science for our country,” Argonne Laboratory Director Paul Kearns said. “It will accelerate scientific discovery by combining high-performance computing and AI to fight climate change, develop life-saving medical treatments, create new materials, understand the universe, and so much more.”

“Aurora excels at tackling both traditional scientific computing problems and AI-powered research,” added Rick Stevens, Argonne’s associate lab director for computing, environment, and life sciences. “As AI continues to reshape the scientific landscape, Aurora gives us a platform to develop new tools and approaches that will significantly accelerate the pace of research.”

Built by Intel and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), Aurora’s first-of-its-kind architecture includes new technologies being deployed at an unprecedented scale. The supercomputer’s 63,744 graphics processing units (GPUs) make it the world’s largest GPU-powered system. It also has more endpoints in its interconnect technology than any other system.

The Aurora installation team, which includes staff from Argonne, Intel, and HPE, continues to work through system validation, verification, and scale-up activities. The team’s work has included addressing various hardware and software issues that emerge as the massive system nears full-scale operations.

Teams participating in the ALCF’s Aurora Early Science Program and DOE’s Exascale Computing Project have been preparing to run their research projects on Aurora for the past several years. The teams have demonstrated strong early performance gains while scaling and optimizing codes for the system. The initial Aurora projects include efforts to advance research in cosmology, fusion energy science, drug discovery, and the design of new materials for clean energy technologies.

“Hitting exascale is a huge milestone, but enabling groundbreaking science is the ultimate goal,” said Susan Coghlan, ALCF project director for Aurora. “The new performance numbers, along with some promising runs from our early science teams, give us a glimpse of what will be possible with Aurora.”