PRACE is offering an online Supercomputing 101 course through the Future Learn program. This free online course will introduce you to what supercomputers are, how they are used and how we can exploit their full computational potential to make scientific breakthroughs.
Today’s supercomputers are the most powerful calculating machines ever invented, capable of performing more than a thousand million million calculations every second. This gives scientists and engineers a powerful new tool to study the natural world – computer simulation. Using supercomputers, we can now conduct virtual experiments that are impossible in the real world – from looking deep inside individual atoms, to studying the future climate of the earth and following the evolution of the entire universe from the big bang.
Over five weeks, the course will look at:
- Supercomputers: introducing supercomputing terminology and some of the largest machines in the world.
- Parallel computers: how they are built from hundreds of thousands of CPUs, each similar to those in a desktop PC.
- Parallel computing: using parallel processing to harness the power of all of those CPUs for a single calculation.
- Computer simulation: how we can perform virtual experiments to make real-life predictions.
case studies: how supercomputing is making scientific breakthroughs that were never possible before.

David Henty from EPCC will teach the Supercomputing course.
This supercomputing course has been developed by the Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe (PRACE) and the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre (EPCC) at The University of Edinburgh in collaboration with SURFsara from The Netherlands. PRACE coordinates many of the largest supercomputers in Europe, so has world-leading experience of the benefits that supercomputing can bring. EPCC is a PRACE partner, operates the UK national supercomputer ARCHER and has a long history of developing and delivering training.