Kabru (supercomputer)
Kabru is a supercomputer that uses a 2.4 GHz Pentium Xeon Cluster and Linux to provide a sustained speed of 959 gigaflops. It was developed by the Institute of Mathematical Sciences (IMSc) in Chennai, India. In June 2004, Kabru was listed as #264 in the TOP500 list of the world's most powerful computers. It takes its name from a Himalayan peak.
Sponsors | Department of Atomic Energy, India |
---|---|
Location | Institute of Mathematical Sciences, C.I.T Campus |
Architecture | Pentium 4 Xeon 2.4GHz, 288cores |
Operating system | Linux |
Speed | 1,002 GFlops |
Ranking | TOP500: 264, June 2004 |
The idea for Kabru was born when Professor Hari Dass of the Institute began looking for a supercomputer to handle his theoretical physics research, which dealt primarily with large-scale simulations in the field of the lattice gauge theory.
The Department of Atomic Energy in India made a grant of Rs 3.5 crore to the Institute to develop Kabru.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.