
All were built in Palmdale, California, by the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based Rockwell International company. Six orbiters were built for flight: Enterprise, Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour.

space agency, this vehicle could carry astronauts and payloads into low Earth orbit, perform in-space operations, then re-enter the atmosphere and land as a glider, returning its crew and any on-board payload to the Earth. Operated from 1977 to 2011 by NASA, the U.S. The Space Shuttle orbiter is the spaceplane component of the Space Shuttle, a partially reusable orbital spacecraft system that was part of the discontinued Space Shuttle program. These four nodes remained active until early 2013 as Columbia was phased out to make way for the Pleiades and Endeavour supercomputers.Discovery approaches the International Space Station (ISS) on STS-121 This allowed room for additional resources to support work in all NASA mission organizations. In 20, four new SGI Altix 4700 nodes containing dual-core processors replaced some existing nodes, decreasing the physical footprint and power costs associated with the system. The system debuted in the second spot on the Top500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputer in November 2004, with a LINPACK rating of 51.9 teraflops peak performance. At the 2005 International Supercomputing Conference, NASA was recognized for reinventing its approach to high-end computing, and for deploying one of the most successful "constellation" supercomputers in history. The team received the 2005 Government Computer News Agency Award for Innovation for installing the original 10,240-processor system in an unprecedented 120 days.


The system was also used extensively for high-fidelity modeling to design future crew exploration and launch vehicles. After the shuttle's return to service, scientists ran near-real-time analyses before each launch and during orbit to help determine any possible debris damage-ultimately clearing vehicles for safe lift-off, reentry, and landing. Space Vehicle Analyses: In addition to critical contributions to RTF, early work on Columbia included simulations to analyze and redesign the Space Shuttle Main Engine flowliner, and to assess damage and repairs during the successful Space Shuttle Discovery flight in July 2005.Video: Marco Librero, NASA/Ames ImpactĪmong the many important scientific and engineering projects benefiting from Columbia's computational capabilities during its nine years of service: The NAS team, with partners SGI and Intel, achieved what many in the supercomputing community considered impossible-conceiving, planning, and constructing the world's largest Linux-based, shared-memory system in four months. This 2004 time-lapse video compresses the 120-day installation of NASA's Columbia supercomputer into 60 seconds of frenetic activity.
