Active | operational 2015 |
---|---|
Sponsors | Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (Italy), Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, University of Milano-Bicocca |
Operators | The Members of the Consortium [1] |
Location | Cineca, Casalecchio di Reno, Italy |
Architecture | IBM NeXtScale Infiniband with 4x QDR switches 2 8-cores Intel Haswell 2.40 GHz per node 16 cores/node,516 nodes, 8256 cores in total 2 Intel Phi 7120p per node on 384 nodes (768 in total); 2 NVIDIA K80 per node on 40 nodes (80 in total, 20 available for scientific research) |
Power | 2,825.55 KW |
Operating system | CentOS 7.0 |
Memory | 128 GB/node, 8 GB/core; 46,592 GB |
Storage | 2.000 TB of local scratch |
Speed | 1,103.1 PFLOPS |
Ranking | TOP500: 130, 2015-11 |
Purpose | computational fluid dynamics, material and life science, and geophysics |
Website | www |
Galileo is a 1.1 -petaFLOPS supercomputer located in Cineca.[2]
History
edit
The development of Galileo was sponsored by the Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (Italy), the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare and the University of Milano-Bicocca
In June 2015, Galileo reached the hundred and fifth position on the TOP500 list of fastest supercomputers in the world. [3]
In the Green500 list of top supercomputers.[4] Galileo reached the three hundred eighty-ninth position in their benchmark, the system tested at 242.17 MFLOPS/W (Performance per watt).
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Consortium of universities". Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ "Nov 2015". TOP500. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ "GALILEO". TOP500. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ "The Green 500 List: November 2015". Graph 500. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
Articles about Galileo and its network
editLa Repubblica in Italian
Corriere Comunicazioni in Italian
ResearchItaly in Italian
RaiNews in Italian
Category:Power Architecture Category:Supercomputers Category:IBM_supercomputers