Japan plans to deploy a 2,000 GPU supercomputer for quantum computing research.

Alongside the Nvidia H100s interconnected by Nvidia Quantum-2 InfiniBand, the ABCI-Q supercomputer is designed for integration with future quantum hardware.

ABCI Image
The ABCI center – Nvidia

The supercomputer follows the AI Bridging Cloud Infrastructure (ABCI) and ABCI 2.0 systems built at the University of Tokyo. The 2.0 supercomputer had a peak Linpack performance of 54.34 petaflops in Top500's latest listing.

Built by Fujitsu at the Global Research and Development center for Business by Quantum-AI Technology (G-QuAT) National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), ABCI-Q is expected to be deployed early next year.

“Researchers need high-performance simulation to tackle the most difficult problems in quantum computing,” Tim Costa, director of HPC and quantum computing at Nvidia, said.

“CUDA-Q and the Nvidia H100 equip pioneers such as those at ABCI to make critical advances and speed the development of quantum-integrated supercomputing.”

CUDA-Q is Nvidia's open-source hybrid quantum computing platform that includes simulation tools and capabilities to program hybrid quantum-classical systems.