In June 2019, the EuroHPC JU governing board selected 8 sites for supercomputing centres located in 8 different EU member states to host the new high-performance computing machines. The hosting sites will be located in
Sofia (Bulgaria),
Ostrava (Czech Republic),
Kajaani (Finland),
Bologna (Italy),
Bissen (Luxembourg),
Minho (Portugal),
Maribor (Slovenia), and
Barcelona (Spain). 3 of the 8 sites will host precursor to
exascale machines (capable of executing more than 150
Petaflops, or 150 million billion calculations per second) that will be in the global top 5 supercomputers, and 5
petascale machines (capable of executing at least 4 Petaflops, or 4 million billion operations per second). In 2022, the EuroHPC governing board selected a further 5 sites to host a new fleet of EuroHPC supercomputers, including the first European exascale supercomputer to be located in Germany. Currently operating supercomputers procured by EuroHPC JU include:
KAROLINA KAROLINA was installed in 2021 at IT4Innovations National Supercomputing Center in the Czech Republic. In the TOP500 list, which evaluates supercomputers in terms of their performance, it ranked 69th worldwide, 19th in Europe, and in the Green500 list of the most energy-efficient supercomputers, it even ranked 8th in 2021. The HPC system supplied by Hewlett Packard Enterprise is designed to respond coherently to the needs of its user communities, addressing complex scientific and industrial challenges, including standard numerical simulations, demanding data analysis, and artificial intelligence applications.
Discoverer "Discoverer", the EuroHPC supercomputer located in Bulgaria, was the third launched under the program on October 21, 2021. It is located on the territory of the Bulgarian Science and Technology Park "Sofia Tech Park" in Sofia, Bulgaria. The cost is co-financed by Bulgaria and EuroHPC JU with a joint investment of €11.5 million completed by Atos. Discoverer has a stable performance of 4.5 petaflops and a peak performance of 6 petaflops.
Vega The Slovenian "Vega" was the first of the EuroHPC JU supercomputers to be launched on 20 April 2021. The system, built by Atos, is located at the Institute of Information Science Maribor (IZUM) in
Maribor, Slovenia. The Vega supercomputer was jointly financed by EuroHPC JU and the Institute of Information Science Maribor (IZUM) to the sum of €17.2 million euros. Vega has a stable performance of 6.9 petaflops and a peak performance of 10.1 petaflops.
MeluXina "Meluxina", Luxembourg's supercomputer, was the second to be launched under the programme on 7 June 2021. Located at the LuxProvide data centre in
Bissen,
Luxembourg, the €30.4 million euros system was completed by Atos, with the Luxembourg government paying for two thirds of the associated costs, and the European Commission contributing the rest. Meluxina has a stable performance of 10 petaflops and a peak performance of 15 petaflops. The system is named after
Melusine — a figure of Luxembourg and European
folklore.
LUMI The
LUMI supercomputer is located at
CSC in
Kajaani,
Finland. The HPE
Cray EX supercomputer was supplied by
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), with joint funding by EuroHPC and the LUMI Consortium. As of mid-2022, the LUMI-C partition is operational, with the LUMI-G partition expected to become operational by the end of 2022. With a measured High Performance
Linpack (HPL) performance of 151,9 petaflops,
LUMI ranked 3rd on the June 2022 edition of the
TOP500 list of the most powerful supercomputers. Once fully operational, the system will have a theoretical peak performance of 550 petaflops.
Leonardo Located in the Technopole of Bologna,
in Bologna,
Italy,
Leonardo is a
petascale supercomputer which was installed in 2022. It is supplied by
ATOS, based on a
BullSequana XH2000 supercomputer and hosted by
CINECA. It is capable of executing over 250 petaflops.
MareNostrum5 MareNostrum 5 will be located at the
Barcelona Supercomputing Center in
Barcelona,
Spain. In 2022 it was announced that the system will be built by
Atos. Once operational, MareNostrum 5 will be a top-of-the-range supercomputer, with an expected peak performance of 314
Petaflops.
Deucalion Deucalion is a
petascale supercomputer hosted at the Minho Advanced Computing Center in
Guimarães,
Portugal. Officially inaugurated in September 2023, it is supplied by
Fujitsu Technology Solutions and integrates a Fujitsu PRIMEHPC system (
ARM partition) with Atos Bull Sequana systems (
x86 partitions). The ARM partition delivers a sustained performance of 3.96 petaflops and a maximum performance of 5.01 petaflops. Altogether, Deucalion can achieve a performance of 10 petaflops.
New supercomputers In 2022, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking announced a further five supercomputers coming soon to five European countries: • DAEDALUS hosted by the
National Infrastructures for Research and Technology (GRNET) in
Greece, • LEVENTE hosted by the Governmental Agency for IT Development (KIFU) in
Hungary, • CASPIr hosted by the
National University of Ireland Galway (NUI Galway) in
Ireland, • EHPCPL hosted by the Academic Computer Centre CYFRONET AGH (CYFRONET) in
Poland, • and JUPITER, the first European
exascale supercomputer, will be hosted by the
Jülich Supercomputing Centre in
Germany. In 2023, the EuroHPC JU announced a further two supercomputers: • Alice Recoque, the second exascale supercomputer in Europe, hosted by
GENCI in
France; and • Arrhenius, a mid-range supercomputer hosted by
Linköping University in
Sweden. == DARE project ==