ParTec technology powers world-leading supercomputers — including TOP500 systems JUPITER (#4) and Leonardo (#10) — and drives global energy-efficiency leadership with the three-time Green500 winner JEDI.
ParTec is a key technological provider for several of Europe’s most powerful and most energy-efficient supercomputers. In the most recent TOP500 list of the worldwide fastest systems (Nov25), ParTec has participated substantially in two of the current top 10; #4th JUPITER and 10th Leonardo. Systems leveraging ParTec’s technology consistently achieve top rankings on the global Green500 list for energy-efficient high-performance computing, as shown by the three-time global winner JEDI (June 2024, November 2024, and June 2025).
Copyright: Meluxina, LuxProvide; Research Centre Jülich (JSC); CINECA, Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC), Text ParTec AG
JUPITER relies on ParTec’s patented dynamic Modular System Architecture (dMSA) and the JUPITER Management Stack (JMS) as its core technical foundation. The JMS is built upon ParTec’s ParaStation Modulo Software Suite, highlighting the company’s leading role in developing and providing the key technologies that make Exascale performance and high energy efficiency possible.
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J For 8-bit operations (suach as used in AI) JUPITER reaches 40 ExaFLOP/s.
The system is built by a supercomputer consortium of ParTec and Eviden.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Prime Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia Hendrik Wüst in front of JUPITER.
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich
JUPITER also received international recognition with the HPCwire Readers’ Choice Award in the “Top Supercomputing Achievement” category, proving that Europecan indeed compete on equal terms with global technology centers like the US and Japan.
The fact that the Booster part was designed and installed in less than two years after the procurement contract was signed in 2023 highlights ParTec’s and the other project partners’ ability to deliver complex, highly scalable computing architectures within exceptionally short timeframes.
All partners made significant contributions to the construction of JUPITER and the installation in its modular data center.
At lower numerical precision – such as in AI model training – JUPITER achieves a theoretical performance of over 40 ExaFLOP/s (8-bit floating-point calculations). This makes JUPITER one of the fastest AI computers in the world, with exceptional large-scale AI training performance due to its high-performance interconnect network.
JUPITER is already delivering initial scientific successes: more than 100 research projects are running on the system, including the simulation of a universal 50-qubit quantum computer and a global Earth Weather system model at 1 km resolution, previously considered computationally unattainable. These early results clearly demonstrate the new possibilities that Exascale systems open up for research and industry. The weather model has won the 2025 Gordon Bell award at SC25 in St. Louis.
The realization of JUPITER builds on more than 20 years of trusted, technological cooperation between ParTec and Research Centre Jülich. Systems such as JUROPA, JURECA, JUWELS, and the JUWELS Booster laid the foundations for the modular architecture now implemented in JUPITER. JUPITER is the first European supercomputer to apply this modular technology at the Exascale level.
JUPITER was procured by the the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) and is jointly funded by the EuroHPC JU and with 50% and the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR) and the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (MKW NRW) with 25% each through the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS). The system is operated the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) at Forschungszentrum Jülich. It forms the core of a European strategy for strengthening technological sovereignty in high-performance computing and lays the foundation for future AI and QC innovations.
Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC) / Ralf-Uwe Limbach
JEDI is the first Module of the Supercomputer Jupiter. It is the three times leader of the global Green500 list, setting new standards for energy efficiency.
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Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
Copyright: Barcelona Supercomputing Centre
MareNostrum 5, a pre-Exascale EuroHPC supercomputer hosted by Barcelona Supercomputing Center, was awarded to a consortium with ParTec as a subcontractor. The system features four partitions using the Bull Sequana XH3000 or Lenovo ThinkSystem architectures with distinct technical characteristics, designed to meet the diverse needs of HPC users. The complete system has an aggregate peak performance of 314 PetaFLOP/s. Its most powerful Booster module (Mare Nostrum 5 ACC) has 1120 nodes with four NVIDIA H100 GPUs each and delivers a total peak performance of 250 PetaFLOP/s. The Cluster module (Mare Nostrum 5 GPP) uses 6408 CPU nodes and achieves a peak performance of 46 PetaFLOP/s; the module was ranked as #19 / #50 in the November 2023 and November 2025 TOP500 lists.
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Cineca, Italy
Copyright: Cineca, Italy
Leonardo is an Italian flagship supercomputer, hosted and operated by Cineca and installed in 2022 at the Technopole of Bologna. It is one of the three pre-Exascale systems selected and announced by the EuroHPC JU.
Leonardo ranked at #4 in the TOP500 list in June 2023 and #10 in November 2025, with a peak performance of 306 PetaFLOP/s. The system comprises 4,992 liquid-cooled Bull Sequana XH2000 compute nodes and NVIDIA A100 GPUs. It provides 111 PetaBytes of storage capacity and ranks at positions #2 and #8 in the June 2023 and November 2025 IO500 lists.
ParTec is one of the main technology partners.
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Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC)
JUWELS (Jülich Wizard for European Leadership Science), a muliti-Petaflop modular supercomputer managed by the Jülich Supercomputing Centre at Forschungszentrum Jülich, supports the Earth System modeling and AI research within the Helmholtz Association. It was the fastest supercomputers in Europe at the time of its installation in 2020 and achieved position # 7 on the TOP500 list.
JUWELS was Europe’s first accelerated fully AI-compatible supercomputer using the ParaStation Modulo Software Suite and is operated as a modular system. It consists of two modules, the Booster module described here was the second to be deployed, and it which uses 936 Bull Sequana XH2000 nodes with four NVIDIA A100 GPUs each. System peak performance is 71 PetaFLOP/s.
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Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC)
The first JUWELS module was the Cluster module. It was deployed in 2018 at Forschungszentrum Jülich, and uses 2567 BullSequana X1000 nodes. Its peak performance is close to 10 PetaFLOP/s.
It is operated with ParaStation Modulo Software Suite and Slurm.
Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC)
JURECA-DC (DC for data-centric) is the successor of the JURECA Cluster- Booster system, optimized for for data-intensive applications.
The system consists of a Cluster module with 576 nodes, and a Booster module of 224 nodes, each equipped with four NVIDIA A100 GPUs. Peak performance of the Booster module is 14.5 PetaFLOP/s, and the Custer module can deliver up to 3.5 PetaFLOP/s.
Like its predecessor, JURECA-DC is operated as a single, heterogeneous system, using ParaStation Modulo & SLURM. Its innovative architecture enables seamless support for diverse high-performance computing and data analytics workloads.
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LuxProvide, Luxembourg’s national AI-Optimized HPC system
Copyright: LuxProvide
In June 2021, LuxProvide commissioned MeluXina, Luxembourg’s EuroHPC supercomputer. The system delivers 18 PetaFLOP/s of computing performance and provides 20 PetaBytes of storage capacity.
MeluXina supports a broad range of workloads, including simulation, modeling, data analytics, and artificial intelligence, enabled by its scalable architecture and GPU-based AI acceleration. In the TOP500 ranking, the system entered at position 36th worldwide and was the most energy-efficient supercomputer in the EU at the time. It’s two modules have a peak performance of 3 PetaFLOP/s (Cluster) and 15 PetaFLOP/s (Booster).
Both modules of MeluXina use the ParaStation Software Suite.
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Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC)
JURECA (Jülich Research on Exascale Cluster Architectures) was the world’s first operational supercomputer based on the dMSA.
It consisted of a Cluster Module with 1884 CPU nodes by T-Platforms with a peak performance of 1.7 PetaFLOP/s, ranked at # of the TOP500 list in November 2015, and a Booster module of 1640 Intel KNL Manycore nodes installed in 2017.
The complete Petascale Cluster/Booster system featured a heterogeneous network landscape of InfiniBand and Intel Omni-Path and was operated by the Jülich Supercomputing Centre at Forschungszentrum Jülich and ParTec as a single, heterogeneous system, using the ParaStation Modulo Software Suite and the Slurm scheduler.
With its novel architecture, it supported a wide variety of high-performance computing and data analytics workloads.
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Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Copyright: Research Centre Jülich (JSC)
JUROPA was the fastest cluster-supercomputer in 2009 in the Top500 list.
On 24 June 2015, JUROPA “Juelich Research on Petaflop Architectures” cluster computer was phased out of operation, having reached the end of its – very effective – lifetime of almost six years. The JUROPA concept was developed as an early co-design project at a time when nobody was talking about co-design. It followed a best-of-breed approach bringing together the most performant processors at this time from Intel, the Nehalem processors, the most efficient QDR Infiniband network by Mellanox, the most effective cabling and switch technology developed by SUN, the most evolved cluster computing software ParaStation by ParTec and the expertise of Europe’s most experienced system integrator and vendor, Bull.
Already in 2009, JUROPA achieved a total performance of nearly 300 TeraFLOP/s. JUROPA helped deliver a host of extremely valuable scientific results, ranging from astrophysics to security research, via quantum physics, brain research, biophysics and social sciences, etc. Many Science and Nature papers attest to the system’s success.

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