This is part of an experimental computer, developed in the mid-1980s by the Goodyear Aerospace Corporation for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. The comptuer derives it name from its ability to operate on large arrays of data in parallel, i.e. on many numbers at once. By contrast, computers of conventional design operate on one or at most a few pieces of data per cycle. One intended application for such a design was the analysis of the large amounts of data received by remote sensing satelliltes.
The Massively Parallel Processor represented one of several approaches to the problem of processing data in parallel. Nearly all modern supercomputers use parallel processing, although not all follow this machine's architecture.
Transferred from NASA to the Museum in 1996.
This object is on display in James S. McDonnell Space Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA.
United States of America
INSTRUMENTS-Computers, General Purpose
Goodyear Aerospace Corporation
3-D: 111.8 x 71.1 x 200.7cm (44 x 28 x 79 in.)
Case: sheet steel cabinet, blue
Circuit boards: epoxy resin printed circuit boards
Circuits: silicon integrated circuits
Massively Parallel Processor Unit
A19960047000
Transferred from NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center
National Air and Space Museum
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