Edinburgh to lead new era of UK supercomputing
The UK’s first next-generation supercomputer – 50 times faster than any of the country’s existing machines – is to be hosted by the University of Edinburgh in a newly built wing of the Advanced Computing Facility.
The exascale supercomputer will be able to perform one billion billion calculations each second, and will be housed in a new £31 million wing of EPCC’s Advanced Computing Facility, purpose-built as part of the Edinburgh and South East Scotland City Region Deal.
Installation of the first phase is due to begin in 2025. Once operational, it will provide high-performance computing capability for key research and industry projects across the UK.
Exascale will help researchers model all aspects of the world, test scientific theories and improve products and services in areas such as artificial intelligence, drug discovery, climate change, astrophysics and advanced engineering.
The computer – one of only a handful of its kind in the world – is funded by the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology through UK Research and Innovation (UKRI). It will be managed by EPCC, the University’s supercomputing centre.
This investment means Edinburgh is one of the few places in Europe able to host a computer of such enormous scale, experts say.
The University has been home to the UK’s high-performance computing services for more than 30 years, and it hosts the country’s current national supercomputer, ARCHER2.
Funding for the new supercomputer was announced by Chancellor Jeremy Hunt in the Spring Budget as part of an investment of around £900 million in both exascale and a separate AI Research Resource.
Exascale is the latest in a series of nationally strategic computing and AI developments at Edinburgh since the University established research hubs in the disciplines 60 years ago.