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Earth Simulator
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== Earth Simulator (first generation) == {{Infobox custom computer | Image = EarthSimulator.jpg | Image_Size = | Alt = | Caption = Earth Simulator (first generation) | Dates = 2002β2009 | Sponsors = | Operators = [[National Space Development Agency of Japan|NASDA]], [[Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute|JAERI]], [[Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology|JAMSTEC]] | Location = JAMSTEC Yokohama Institute for Earth Sciences | Architecture = 640 processor nodes (each consists of 8 vector arithmetic processors) interconnected by single-stage crossbar switches | Power = | OS = [[SUPER-UX]] | Space = {{cvt|65|Γ|50|m}} | Memory = 10 TB total | Storage = | Speed = 40 TFLOPS (peak) | Cost = | ChartName = [[TOP500]] | ChartPosition = 1 | ChartDate = June 2002 | Purpose = | Legacy = | Emulators = | Website = | Sources = }} The first generation of Earth Simulator, developed by the Japanese government's initiative "Earth Simulator Project", was a highly parallel vector [[supercomputer]] system for running [[global climate model]]s to evaluate the [[effects of global warming]] and problems in solid earth geophysics. The system was developed for [[JAXA|Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency]], [[Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute]], and [[Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology|Japan Marine Science and Technology Center]] (JAMSTEC) in 1997. Construction started in October 1999, and the site officially opened on 11 March 2002. The project cost 60 billion [[Japanese yen|yen]]. Built by [[NEC]], ES was based on their [[NEC SX-6|SX-6]] architecture. It consisted of 640 nodes with eight [[vector processor]]s and 16 [[gigabyte]]s of [[computer memory]] at each node, for a total of 5120 [[central processing unit|processor]]s and 10 [[terabyte]]s of memory. Two nodes were installed per 1 metre Γ 1.4 metre Γ 2 metre cabinet. Each cabinet consumed 20 kW of power. The system had 700 [[terabyte]]s of [[disk storage]] (450 for the system and 250 for the users) and 1.6 [[petabyte]]s of [[mass storage]] in [[tape drive]]s. It was able to run holistic simulations of global climate in both the atmosphere and the oceans down to a resolution of 10 km. Its performance on the [[LINPACK]] benchmark was 35.86 [[TFLOPS]], which was almost five times faster than the previous fastest supercomputer, [[ASCI White]]. ES was the [[TOP500|fastest supercomputer in the world]] from 2002 to 2004. Its capacity was surpassed by [[IBM]]'s [[Blue Gene|Blue Gene/L]] prototype on 29 September 2004. {|style="margin: 0 auto;" | [[File:Earth Simulator PB111941.jpg|thumb|upright|Earth Simulator interconnection rack]] | [[File:Earth Simulator PB111943.jpg|thumb|upright|Earth Simulator processing rack]] | [[File:Earth Simulator PB111965.jpg|thumb|Earth Simulator arithmetic processing module]] |}
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