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40°05′43″N88°14′31″W / 40.095391°N 88.242043°W /40.095391; -88.242043
| Sponsors | US NSF andUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign |
|---|---|
| Operators | Cray Inc. |
| Location | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign |
| Architecture | 49,000AMD CPUs 237 Cray XE6 cabinets 44 Cray XK7 cabinets |
| Operating system | Cray Linux Environment |
| Memory | 1.5 PB |
| Storage | 26.5 PB, 1.1 TB/s Sonexion storage array |
| Speed | 13.3PetaFLOPS |
| Purpose | Scientific research |
| Website | bluewaters |
Blue Waters was apetascalesupercomputer operated by theNational Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at theUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. On August 8, 2007, theNational Science Board approved a resolution which authorized theNational Science Foundation to fund "the acquisition and deployment of the world's most powerful leadership-class supercomputer." The NSF awarded $208 million for the Blue Waters project.
On August 8, 2011, NCSA announced thatIBM had terminated its contract to provide hardware for the project, and would refund payments to date.[1]Cray Inc. then was awarded a $188 million contract with theUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign to build the supercomputer for the Blue Waters project; the supercomputer was installed in phases in 2012.[2] It operated until December 31, 2021, and was replaced by theDelta project in April 2022.[3]
Blue Waters ran science and engineering codes at sustained speeds of at least onepetaFLOPS. It had more than 1.5 PB of memory, more than 25 PB of disk storage, and up to 500 PB of tape storage.[4] The storage filesystem was the CrayLustre parallel file system, which is capable of terabyte-per-second storage bandwidth. It was connected with 300 Gbit/s wide area links.[5]

A machine the scale of Blue Waters introduces special concerns with regards to cooling and power. A new National Petascale Computing Facility was built at theUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign at the corner of Oak Street and St. Mary's Road. This facility houses Blue Waters and other NCSA computing, networking, and data systems. The 88,000-square-foot (8,200 m2) building has a 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m2) machine room. The facility has been certifiedLEED Gold.[6] The facility makes use of the university's campus-wide water cooling system and additional on-site cooling towers that take advantage of the low temperatures inIllinois during the winter months to help reduce energy consumption. The building was designed using complex fluid dynamic models to optimize the cooling system. Energy efficiency at the data center is estimated to be in the 85–90% range, far superior to the 40% efficiency typically seen in large data centers.[7][needs update]