ai
  • Crypto News
  • Ai
  • eSports
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Blockchain
Home»Ai»Lincoln Lab unveils the most powerful AI supercomputer at any US university | MIT News
Ai

Lincoln Lab unveils the most powerful AI supercomputer at any US university | MIT News

Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The new TX-Generative AI Next (TX-GAIN) computing system at the Lincoln Laboratory Supercomputing Center  (LLSC) is the most powerful AI supercomputer at any U.S. university. With its recent ranking from  TOP500, which biannually publishes a list of the top supercomputers in various categories, TX-GAIN joins the ranks of other powerful systems at the LLSC, all supporting research and development at Lincoln Laboratory and across the MIT campus. 

« TX-GAIN will enable our researchers to achieve scientific and engineering breakthroughs. The system will play a large role in supporting generative AI, physical simulation, and data analysis across all research areas, » says Lincoln Laboratory Fellow Jeremy Kepner, who heads the LLSC. 

The LLSC is a key resource for accelerating innovation at Lincoln Laboratory. Thousands of researchers tap into the LLSC to analyze data, train models, and run simulations for federally funded research projects. The supercomputers have been used, for example, to simulate billions of aircraft encounters to develop collision-avoidance systems for the Federal Aviation Administration, and to train models in the complex tasks of autonomous navigation for the Department of Defense. Over the years, LLSC capabilities have been essential to numerous award-winning technologies, including those that have improved  airline safety,  prevented the spread of new diseases, and  aided in hurricane responses. 

As its name suggests, TX-GAIN is especially equipped for developing and applying generative AI. Whereas traditional AI focuses on categorization tasks, like identifying whether a photo depicts a dog or cat, generative AI produces entirely new outputs. Kepner describes it as a mathematical combination of interpolation (filling in the gaps between known data points) and extrapolation (extending data beyond known points). Today, generative AI is widely known for its use of large language models to create human-like responses to user prompts. 

At Lincoln Laboratory, teams are applying generative AI to various domains beyond large language models. They are using the technology, for instance, to evaluate radar signatures, supplement weather data where coverage is missing, root out anomalies in network traffic, and explore chemical interactions to design new medicines and materials.

To enable such intense computations, TX-GAIN is powered by more than 600 NVIDIA graphics processing unit accelerators specially designed for AI operations, in addition to traditional high-performance computing hardware. With a peak performance of two AI exaflops (two quintillion floating-point operations per second), TX-GAIN is the top AI system at a university, and in the Northeast. Since TX-GAIN came online this summer, researchers have taken notice. 

« TX-GAIN is allowing us to model not only significantly more protein interactions than ever before, but also much larger proteins with more atoms. This new computational capability is a game-changer for protein characterization efforts in biological defense, » says Rafael Jaimes, a researcher in Lincoln Laboratory’s Counter–Weapons of Mass Destruction Systems Group. 

The LLSC’s focus on interactive supercomputing makes it especially useful to researchers. For years, the LLSC has pioneered software that lets users access its powerful systems without needing to be experts in configuring algorithms for parallel processing.  

« The LLSC has always tried to make supercomputing feel like working on your laptop, » Kepner says. « The amount of data and the sophistication of analysis methods needed to be competitive today are well beyond what can be done on a laptop. But with our user-friendly approach, people can run their model and get answers quickly from their workspace. »

Beyond supporting programs solely at Lincoln Laboratory, TX-GAIN is enhancing research collaborations with MIT’s campus. Such collaborations include the Haystack Observatory, Center for Quantum Engineering, Beaver Works, and Department of Air Force–MIT AI Accelerator. The latter initiative is rapidly prototyping, scaling, and applying AI technologies for the U.S. Air Force and Space Force, optimizing flight scheduling for global operations as one fielded example.

The LLSC systems are housed in an energy-efficient data center and facility in Holyoke, Massachusetts. Research staff in the LLSC are also tackling the immense energy needs of AI and leading research into various power-reduction methods. One software tool they developed can reduce the energy of training an AI model by as much as 80 percent.

« The LLSC provides the capabilities needed to do leading-edge research, while in a cost-effective and energy-efficient manner, » Kepner says.

All of the supercomputers at the LLSC use the « TX » nomenclature in homage to Lincoln Laboratory’s Transistorized Experimental Computer Zero (TX-0) of 1956. TX-0 was one of the world’s first transistor-based machines, and its 1958 successor, TX-2, is storied for its role in pioneering human-computer interaction and AI. With TX-GAIN, the LLSC continues this legacy.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Microsoft says AI can create “zero day” threats in biology

octobre 2, 2025

Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship welcomes Ana Bakshi as new executive director | MIT News

octobre 2, 2025

EV tax credits are dead in the US. Now what?

octobre 2, 2025

The Download: RIP EV tax credits, and OpenAI’s new valuation

octobre 2, 2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Top Posts

SwissCryptoDaily.ch delivers the latest cryptocurrency news, market insights, and expert analysis. Stay informed with daily updates from the world of blockchain and digital assets.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Top Insights

Ethereum price forms giant hammer as key metric nears $1 trillion

octobre 3, 2025

GRID Launches CS2 Rushzone, Daily Competitive Counter-Strike 2 Betting Product

octobre 3, 2025

Top Crypto Traders of 2025: Wynn, Kang and More

octobre 3, 2025
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • About us
  • Get In Touch
  • Cookies Policy
  • Privacy-Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2025 Swisscryptodaily.ch.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.