The significance of India’s mission to develop supercomputers
- October 3, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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The significance of India’s mission to develop supercomputers
Sub : Sci
Sec: Awareness in AI & Computers
Context:
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated three PARAM Rudra supercomputers on September 26, with a total investment of Rs 130 crore.
- These supercomputers are designed to provide advanced facilities to India’s scientific community, supporting research across various fields including physics, cosmology, and earth sciences.
What is a Supercomputer?
- Definition: A large computing system designed for complex scientific and industrial challenges.
- Purpose: Handles time-consuming and computation-intensive tasks
- Physical Structure: Occupies large rooms with multiple racks containing computer nodes with many cores
- IBM Blue Gene P supercomputer is one of the largest examples of parallel computing as of the year 2023.
- Applications:
- Quantum mechanics, Weapons research, Weather forecasting, Climate research, Oil and gas exploration, Molecular dynamics, Physical simulations, Data analytics, Big data processing
The National Supercomputing Mission (NSM)
- Launch: 2015
- Goal: Build a grid of 70 powerful supercomputing systems
- These supercomputers were later networked on the National Supercomputing Grid over the National Knowledge Network (NKN).
- Budget: Rs 4,500 crores
- Duration: Seven years
- Current Status: Two phases complete, third phase ongoing
Key Stakeholders
- Department of Science and Technology (DST)
- Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY)
- Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC)
- Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru
Applications
- Climate and weather modeling, Aerospace engineering, Computational biology, Atomic energy simulations, National security and defence, Seismic analysis, Disaster management, Computational chemistry, Nanomaterials research, Astrophysics, Financial modeling
Achievements (2019-2023)
Technical Milestones
- Total capacity: 24.83 petaFLOPS High-Performance Computing (HPC) machines commissioned
- Installation of multiple systems:
- 7 systems > 1 petaFLOPS
- 8 systems: 500 teraFLOPS – 1 petaFLOPS
- 13 systems: 50-500 teraFLOPS
Supercomputer | Institute | Capacity and memory |
PARAM Shivay | IIT BHU | 837 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 54.5 TB |
PARAM Shakti | IIT Kharagpur | 1.66 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 103.125 TB |
PARAM Brahma | Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune | 1.75 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 56.8 TB |
PARAM Yukti | Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bangalore | 1.8 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Sanganak | IIT Kanpur | 1.67 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 104.832 TB |
PARAM Pravega | Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore | 3.3 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 245.945 TB |
PARAM Seva | IIT Hyderabad | 838 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Smriti | National Agri-Food Biotechnology Institute, Mohali | 838 teraFLOPS |
PARAM Utkarsh | CDAC, Bangalore | 838 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Ganga | IIT Roorkee | 1.66 petaFLOPS and a total memory of 104.832 TB |
PARAM Ananta | IIT Gandhinagar | 838 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Porul | NIT, Trichy | 838 teraFLOPS |
PARAM Himalaya | IIT Mandi | 838 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Kamrupa | IIT Guwahati | 838 teraFLOPS and a total memory of 52.416 TB |
PARAM Siddhi | AI CDAC, Pune | 5.2 petaFLOPS and 210 petaFLOPS (AI) |
PARAM Rudra | Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, Pune | 1 petaFLOPS |
Inter-University Accelerator Centre, Delhi | 838 teraFLOPS | |
SN Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Kolkata | 838 teraFLOPS |
Infrastructure Development
- Operational R&D Systems: SANGAM Testbed, PARAM Shrestha, PARAM Embryo, PARAM Neel, PARAM Spoorthi, PARAM Sampooran, Bioinformatics facility, System software lab
Human Resource Development:
- 1.75 lakh people trained in HPCs
- 5,930 experts from 100+ institutes utilized facilities
- 73.25 lakh high-performance computational queries executed
- Learning centers established at: IIT Kharagpur, IIT Palakkad, IIT Chennai, IIT Goa, CDAC, Pune
Historical Significance
- The NSM represents India’s response to historical technology denials:
- Space technology restrictions in the 1970s
- Supercomputer development barriers in the 1990s
- These challenges motivated India to develop indigenous, cost-effective technologies, with the NSM emerging as a crucial tool for technological self-reliance and soft power projection.
Source: IE