The logo of Atos is seen on a company building in Nantes, France, March 11, 2022.
REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 4 (Reuters) - A Franco-German consortium said on Wednesday it had signed a deal to provide Europe's first Exascale supercomputer, as the region tries to catch up with the United States in next-generation computing.
Supercomputers are vastly more powerful than traditional ones, and an Exascale supercomputer can perform one quintillion - or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 - calculations per second.
The 500 million euro ($524 million) deal will see the consortium provide a supercomputer, called JUPITER, for the German Jülich Supercomputing Centre.
"JUPITER will have three times the computing capability of Europe’s current most powerful supercomputer", the consortium said, adding it would require the space of about four tennis courts.
Persons:
Stephane Mahe, Germany's, Gaëlle Sheehan, Mark Potter
Organizations:
REUTERS, EuroHPC, EU, supercomputing, Jülich Supercomputing, Thomson
Locations:
Nantes, France, German, United States, Europe