list. The red crosses denote the most power efficient computer, while the blue ones denote the computer ranked#500.
FLOPS per watt is a common measure. Like the
FLOPS (
floating point operations per second) metric it is based on, the metric is usually applied to
scientific computing and simulations involving many
floating-point calculations.
Examples , the Green500 list rates the two most efficient supercomputers highest those are both based on the same
manycore accelerator
PEZY-SCnp Japanese technology in addition to Intel Xeon processors both at
RIKEN, the top one at 6673.8 MFLOPS/watt; and the third ranked is the Chinese-technology
Sunway TaihuLight (a much bigger machine, that is the ranked 2nd on
TOP500, the others are not on that list) at 6051.3 MFLOPS/watt. In June 2012, the Green500 list rated
BlueGene/Q, Power BQC 16C as the most efficient supercomputer on the TOP500 in terms of FLOPS per watt, running at 2,100.88 MFLOPS/watt. In November 2010, IBM machine,
Blue Gene/Q achieves 1,684 MFLOPS/watt. On 9 June 2008, CNN reported that
IBM's Roadrunner supercomputer achieved 376 MFLOPS/watt. As part of the
Intel Tera-Scale research project, the team produced an 80-core CPU that can achieve over 16,000 MFLOPS/watt. The future of that CPU is not certain. Microwulf, a low-cost desktop
Beowulf cluster of four dual-core
Athlon 64 X2 3800+ computers, runs at 58 MFLOPS/watt. Kalray has developed a 256-core VLIW CPU that achieves 25,000 MFLOPS/watt. The next generation is expected to achieve 75,000 MFLOPS/watt. However, in 2019 their latest chip for embedded is 80-core and claims up to 4 TFLOPS at 20 W.
Adapteva announced the
Epiphany V, a 1024-core 64-bit RISC processor intended to achieve 75 GFLOPS/watt, though they later announced that the Epiphany V was "unlikely" to become available as a commercial product. ==GPU efficiency==