Researchers at the US Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory broke the exascale barrier, achieving a peak throughput of 1.88 exaops—faster than any previously reported science application—while analyzing genomic data on the recently launch
Filter News
Area of Research
- (-) Clean Energy (62)
- Advanced Manufacturing (1)
- Biological Systems (3)
- Biology and Environment (27)
- Building Technologies (1)
- Climate and Environmental Systems (4)
- Computational Biology (2)
- Computational Engineering (9)
- Computer Science (21)
- Data (2)
- Electricity and Smart Grid (1)
- Energy Frontier Research Centers (1)
- Functional Materials for Energy (1)
- Fusion and Fission (6)
- Fusion Energy (2)
- Geographic Information Science and Technology (3)
- Isotopes (1)
- Knowledge Discovery (1)
- Materials (63)
- Materials for Computing (6)
- Mathematics (1)
- National Security (16)
- Neutron Science (20)
- Nuclear Science and Technology (3)
- Quantum information Science (40)
- Sensors and Controls (1)
- Supercomputing (324)
- Transportation Systems (1)
- Visualization (2)
News Type
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory today unveiled Summit as the world’s most powerful and smartest scientific supercomputer.
Last November a team of students and educators from Robertsville Middle School in Oak Ridge and scientists from Oak Ridge National Laboratory submitted a proposal to NASA for their Cube Satellite Launch Initiative in hopes of sending a student-designed
A cross-disciplinary research team at Oak Ridge National Laboratory is using supercomputing to create an unprecedented view of the 3D interactions among components of the cellular machinery in Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood), a fast-growing
ORNL researchers have been assisting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital with imaging data analysis for the past eight years.
A new integrated computational model reduces uncertainty in climate predictions by bridging Earth systems with energy and economic models and large-scale human impact data.