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Nvidia and HPE build supercomputers in Germany

Nvidia, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre announced on Tuesday that they will be partnering to build a supercomputer using Nvidia’s next-generation chip.

Scientists will be able to use the Blue Lion supercomputer in early 2027 using Nvidia "Vera Rubin' chips.

The announcement was made at a conference on supercomputing in Hamburg, Germany. It follows Nvidia’s announcement that Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, in the United States, also plans to build an system using these chips next year.

Nvidia has also announced that Jupiter, a supercomputer that uses its chips and is located at the German National Research Institute Forschungszentrum Julich in Germany, has officially been named Europe's fastest system.

These deals are a way for European institutions to remain competitive with the U.S. on supercomputers, which are used in scientific fields ranging from biotechnology to research into climate change.

Nvidia was a pioneer in artificial intelligence long before it became a powerhouse. Its goal was to convince scientists to use their chips to accelerate complex computer problems such as climate modeling. These problems involved many calculations, which could take several months.

Nvidia now works to convince scientists to use artificial intelligent. These AI systems can use the results of some precise calculations to make predictions. While not as accurate, they can still be helpful and take much less time.

Nvidia unveiled its AI model, "Climate in a Bottle", on Tuesday. Dion Harris from Nvidia's data center product marketing said that scientists would be able input some initial conditions, such as sea surface temperature, and generate a weather forecast for the next 10-30 years.

Harris explained that researchers will combine classic physics with AI to solve turbulent atmospheric flow. This technique will enable them to analyze thousands of thousands more scenarios with greater detail than before. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast in San Francisco, with Stephen Nellis reporting from San Francisco.

(source: Reuters)