| Tech U.S. Department of Energy forms $1 billion supercomputer and AI partnership with AMD: Reuters
 Published Mon, Oct 27 202511:41 AM EDTUpdated An Hour Ago
 
 
  
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 Dado Ruvic | Reuters
 
 The U.S. has formed a $1 billion partnership with  Advanced Micro Devices
 
 to construct two supercomputers that will tackle large scientific  problems ranging from nuclear power to cancer treatments to national  security, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and AMD CEO Lisa Su told  Reuters.
 
 The U.S. is building the two machines to ensure the  country has enough supercomputers to run increasingly complex  experiments that require harnessing enormous amounts of data-crunching  capability. The machines can accelerate the process of making scientific  discoveries in areas the U.S. is focused on.
 
 Energy  Secretary Wright said the systems would “supercharge” advances in  nuclear power and fusion energy, technologies for defense and national  security, and the development of drugs.    Scientists and companies are  trying to replicate fusion, the reaction that fuels the sun, by jamming  light atoms in a plasma gas under intense heat and pressure to release  massive amounts of energy.
 
 “We’ve made great progress, but plasmas  are unstable, and we need to recreate the center of the sun on Earth,”  Wright told Reuters.
 
 “We’re going to get just massively faster  progress using the computation from these AI systems that I believe will  have practical pathways to harness fusion energy in the next two or  three years.”
 
 Wright said the supercomputers would also help  manage the U.S. arsenal of nuclear weapons and accelerate drug discovery  by simulating ways to treat cancer down to the molecular level.
 
 “My  hope is in the next five or eight years, we will turn most cancers,  many of which today are ultimate death sentences, into manageable  conditions,” Wright said.
 
 The  plans call for the first computer called Lux to be constructed and come  online within the next six months. It will be based around AMD’s MI355X  artificial intelligence chips, and the design will also include central  processors (CPUs) and networking chips made by AMD. The system is  co-developed by AMD,  Hewlett Packard Enterprise
 
 ,  Oracle
 Cloud Infrastructure and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).
 
 AMD’s Su said the Lux deployment was the fastest deployment of this size of computer that she has seen.
 
 “This is the speed and agility that we wanted to [do] this for the U.S. AI efforts,” Su said.
 
 ORNL  Director Stephen Streiffer said the Lux supercomputer will deliver  about three times the AI capacity of current supercomputers.
 
 The  second, more advanced computer called Discovery will be based around  AMD’s MI430 series of AI chips that are tuned for high-performance  computing. This system will be designed by ORNL, HPE and AMD. Discovery  is expected to be delivered in 2028 and be ready for operations in 2029.
 
 Streiffer said he expected enormous gains but couldn’t predict how much greater computational capability it would have.
 
 The  MI430 is a special variant of its MI400 series that combines important  features of traditional supercomputing chips along with the features to  run AI applications, Su said.
 
 The Department of Energy will host  the computers, the companies will provide the machines and capital  spending, and both sides will share the computing power, a DOE official  said.
 
 The two supercomputers based on AMD chips are intended to be  the first of many of these types of partnerships with private industry  and DOE labs across the country, the official said.
 
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