• ANU is home to Gadi, a high-performance supercomputer at the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) used by 7500+ researchers across the University and the country.
  • The machine is named ‘Gadi’ [pronounced Gar-dee], a word of the Ngunnawal people meaning ‘to search for’.
  • Australian researchers can access Gadi from anywhere in the world, at any time of day. Running 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
  • Gadi contains more than 260,000 CPU cores, 1.25 petabytes of memory, and 776 GPUs, delivering well over 27 petaflops of peak performance and 2.3 billion compute hours annually to support diverse workloads.
  • NCI is one of Australia’s two Tier-1 high-performance computing and data organisations, offering an integrated ecosystem of compute, cloud, storage, visualisation, and data services that enable breakthroughs across fields such as climate science, genomics, astronomy, materials science, health, and chemistry.