Open Superconducting Quantum Computers (OpenSuperQPlus) has the goal to deliver a 1,000-qubit quantum-computing system made in Europe.
At the request of the Digitalverbund Bayern, the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre has set up the BayernCollab, a platform that supports team collaboration as well as inter-university projects and tasks.
New high-performance computers, practical storage solutions, and additional useful services for the digitization of research and education: Those relying on the IT services of the Leibniz…
Take a short tour of the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) and find out about the highlights 2023: the launch of SuperMUC-NG Phase 2, terrabyte and the first quantum computers, how artificial…
This is what happens when you keep someone away from computers: He studies computer science, becomes a professor and joins the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre. Prof Dr Helmut Reiser has been deputy…
16 rooms on two floors, sophisticated sewage installations and even a bathroom with a lowered drain: together with archaeologists from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, the LRZ has has…
Phase 2 of the SuperMUC-NG brings supercomputing and artificial intelligence even closer together at the LRZ: The graphics processing units (GPUs) integrated into the new system favour artificial…
The research project Co-design of volume-coupled multiphysics software: heterogeneous EXASCALE systems for geodynamics (CoMPS) helps to construct a next generation mantle circulation model.
Am LRZ wird ein Forschungsinformationssystem (RIS) auf der Basis der Anwendung 'Bay.FIS' (HSWT) entwickelt.
Piloting a Cooperative Open Web Search Infrastructure to Support Europe's Digital Sovereignty.