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Rebuilding a lost continent: Supercomputers reveal Antarctica before the ice
Rebuilding a lost continent: Supercomputers reveal Antarctica before the ice
The future of cancer research runs on supercomputers
The future of cancer research runs on supercomputers
Meta’s next frontier may not be social media; it may be supercomputing
Meta’s next frontier may not be social media; it may be supercomputing
IBM’s sub-1 nanometer chip breakthrough: A genuine revolution, or another semiconductor science project?
IBM’s sub-1 nanometer chip breakthrough: A genuine revolution, or another semiconductor science project?
The mathematical breakthrough that could free millions of supercomputer hours
The mathematical breakthrough that could free millions of supercomputer hours
How HPC is connecting natural fusion in thunderstorms to the future of clean energy
How HPC is connecting natural fusion in thunderstorms to the future of clean energy
Supercomputers challenge the origin story of cosmic explosions
Supercomputers challenge the origin story of cosmic explosions
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Antarctic ice meets the rocky coastline. Researchers traced landscape features from the two-kilometre-high coastal escarpment of Dronning Maud Land to the subglacial Gamburtsev Mountains, buried beneath 1–3 km of ice  Credit Matt Palmer
Antarctic ice meets the rocky coastline. Researchers traced landscape features from the two-kilometre-high coastal escarpment of Dronning Maud Land to the subglacial Gamburtsev Mountains, buried beneath 1–3 km of ice Credit Matt Palmer
Featured

Rebuilding a lost continent: Supercomputers reveal Antarctica before the ice

oneal July 2, 2026, 10:00 am

Advanced landscape evolution models uncover how the rise of Antarctica’s mountains may have primed the continent for its first great ice sheet

Reconstructing a continent’s geological evolution over hundreds of millions of years is among the most computationally demanding challenges in science. As mountains rise, rivers carve landscapes, and continents drift, these processes interact with shifting atmospheric and oceanic conditions to create an incredibly complex multiphysics puzzle.
 
By integrating geological observations, thermochronology, and paleoclimate data with large-scale numerical simulations, an international research team has successfully peered back through 160 million years of Antarctic history. Their findings suggest that the continent's dramatic topography predates the formation of its first major ice sheet, fundamentally reshaping our understanding of Antarctica’s transition from a temperate region to a frozen wilderness. Beyond these geological insights, the study underscores the indispensable role of high-performance computing in unlocking our planet's deep history.

Turning deep time into a computational problem

The evolution of Antarctica cannot be observed directly.
 
Instead, scientists must solve an immense inverse problem.
 
Starting with sparse geological evidence, including thermochronology measurements, erosion histories, present-day topography, geophysical observations, and paleoclimate records, they seek to reconstruct landscapes that disappeared tens of millions of years ago.
 
Accomplishing that requires coupling numerical models spanning tectonics, erosion, river incision, surface processes, paleoclimate, and ice-sheet evolution.
 
Rather than relying on static geological reconstructions, the researchers employed forward landscape evolution simulations that began approximately 160 million years ago and advanced to the Eocene–Oligocene transition roughly 34 million years ago. The simulations used one-kilometer spatial resolution, a computational timestep of 1,000 years, and generated topographic outputs every two million years, producing a detailed digital reconstruction of Antarctic landscape evolution across more than 126 million years.
 
That temporal scale alone illustrates the extraordinary computational challenge.

Simulating continental evolution

At the heart of the study lies a sophisticated landscape evolution model built upon the open-source FastScape framework, one of computational geoscience’s leading numerical platforms for simulating long-term erosion and tectonic evolution. The supplemental methods describe extensive parameter optimization, erosion modeling, thermochronology predictions, and uncertainty analysis used to reproduce the continent’s ancient topography.
 
The model incorporated numerous interacting physical processes, including:
  • River incision and drainage evolution
  • Hillslope diffusion
  • Surface erosion
  • Lithospheric flexure
  • Escarpment formation
  • Mountain uplift
  • Sediment transport
Unlike simplified geological reconstructions, these simulations allowed the Antarctic landscape to evolve naturally according to the governing physical equations.
 
Every simulated timestep updated elevation, erosion, drainage patterns, and surface morphology, gradually transforming an initial continental configuration into the reconstructed Antarctica observed at the onset of major glaciation.

Optimizing millions of years of history

Running a landscape model is only the beginning.
 
Determining whether that simulation accurately represents reality requires comparing model output against multiple independent geological datasets.
 
The researchers therefore performed extensive parameter optimization using an automated misfit-minimization approach that simultaneously evaluated escarpment position, plateau elevations, Gamburtsev Mountain heights, erosion histories, and thermochronological age constraints.
 
Rather than producing a single deterministic solution, the study explored numerous parameter combinations to quantify uncertainty and identify the highest-quality reconstructions.
 
This type of computational optimization exemplifies modern Earth-system modeling.
 
Instead of asking, “Can this model reproduce Antarctica?”
 
Scientists ask, “Among thousands of physically plausible models, which best matches every available observation?”
 
Answering that question requires substantial computational resources.

Bridging geology and climate

The reconstructed landscapes became inputs for additional climate simulations.
 
The researchers coupled paleotopographic reconstructions with an energy-balance climate model to investigate how evolving mountain ranges altered Antarctic temperatures and snowfall.
 
The supplemental analyses demonstrate that the model successfully reproduces expected polar amplification behavior across varying global mean temperatures while remaining consistent with independent paleoclimate reconstructions.
 
This coupling between landscape evolution and climate modeling is particularly significant.
 
Mountain building influences atmospheric circulation.
 
Atmospheric circulation affects snowfall.
 
Snowfall determines where glaciers can form.
 
Those glaciers subsequently reshape the landscape through erosion.
 
Capturing these feedbacks requires solving tightly coupled numerical systems spanning multiple scientific disciplines.

The hidden role of the Gamburtsev Mountains

Among the study’s most intriguing conclusions is the importance of the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains.
 
Buried beneath kilometers of ice in East Antarctica, these mountains have long puzzled geologists because they rival major alpine ranges despite lying deep within an ancient continental craton.
 
The simulations indicate that elevated interior topography existed well before continent-wide glaciation, providing favorable conditions for early ice accumulation once global temperatures cooled sufficiently. References throughout the study connect this interpretation with decades of geophysical, thermochronological, and landscape investigations of the Gamburtsev Mountains and surrounding East Antarctica.
 
Rather than mountains simply surviving beneath the ice sheet, the research suggests they may have actively helped initiate Antarctica’s transition into an ice-covered continent.

Supercomputers as geological time machines

Perhaps the greatest achievement of the project lies not in a single scientific conclusion but in its computational methodology.
 
The simulations reconstruct processes occurring over geological timescales that dwarf the duration of human civilization.
 
No laboratory experiment can reproduce 160 million years of erosion.
 
No field expedition can observe mountain formation across tens of millions of years.
 
Only numerical simulation allows scientists to investigate such questions quantitatively.
 
By integrating geological observations, thermochronology, paleoclimate constraints, landscape evolution algorithms, and uncertainty quantification into a unified computational workflow, researchers transformed fragments of Earth’s history into a coherent digital narrative.

Why HPC matters for climate science

The broader implications extend far beyond Antarctica.
 
Modern climate science increasingly depends on understanding Earth’s long-term geological evolution.
 
Continental topography influences atmospheric circulation.
 
Ocean basin geometry governs heat transport.
 
Mountain ranges alter precipitation.
 
Landscape evolution affects carbon cycling through weathering and erosion.
 
Each process operates over millions of years yet continues influencing climate today.
 
High-performance computing enables researchers to couple these processes into comprehensive Earth-system models capable of exploring interactions that would otherwise remain inaccessible.
 
As computing power continues to increase, future models will incorporate finer spatial resolution, more sophisticated physical parameterizations, and increasingly realistic coupling between tectonics, climate, ice sheets, and ocean circulation.

Reconstructing the future by understanding the past

Although this research examines events tens of millions of years old, its relevance is thoroughly modern. Understanding how Antarctica first became glaciated provides critical context for predicting how its ice sheets may respond to future climate change. The study demonstrates that today’s Antarctic landscape is the product of an extraordinarily long geological evolution, one that can now be explored with unprecedented fidelity through advanced numerical simulation.
 
The message is equally compelling for the supercomputing community: the world’s fastest machines are no longer limited to forecasting tomorrow’s weather or simulating future technologies. They are now being used to reconstruct worlds that vanished millions of years ago, turning every processor core into a window into Earth’s deep past. Each simulation deepens our understanding of how landscapes, climates, and ice sheets evolved in tandem; as computing power grows, so does our ability to explore not just where our planet is headed, but the complex geological journey that shaped the world we inhabit today.
Jill Mesirov, PhD
Jill Mesirov, PhD
Featured

The future of cancer research runs on supercomputers

Deck July 1, 2026, 1:30 pm

Sanford Burnham Prebys recruits one of the world’s leading computational biologists to accelerate AI-driven biomedical discovery through advanced computing

For decades, supercomputers have reshaped our understanding of the universe through feats like simulating stellar explosions, modeling global climate patterns, and engineering next-generation aircraft. Today, these immense computational capabilities are being directed inward to address one of science’s greatest challenges: deciphering the complex language of human biology.
 
This shift was underscored this week by the appointment of Dr. Jill P. Mesirov, a pioneer in computational biology and cancer genomics, as Distinguished Professor and Senior Vice President for Computational Science at Sanford Burnham Prebys. Her recruitment marks a strategic effort to integrate advanced computing, artificial intelligence, and data science into the core of the institute’s biomedical research. For the high-performance computing (HPC) community, this move is more than just a key hire; it signals the definitive convergence of supercomputing, AI, and modern medicine.

Biology has become an HPC problem

Biological research has undergone a remarkable transformation during the past twenty years. Sequencing a human genome once required years of effort and billions of dollars. Today, thousands of genomes can be sequenced in days. Single-cell sequencing technologies now generate millions of individual cellular measurements from a single experiment, while spatial transcriptomics and advanced imaging systems produce multidimensional datasets measured in petabytes.
 
Extracting meaningful biological insight from these data is no longer primarily an experimental challenge.
 
It is a computational one.
 
Modern cancer research depends upon algorithms capable of integrating genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and clinical datasets simultaneously. These analyses involve billions of variables and demand computational infrastructures that resemble those found in national supercomputing centers.
 
Mesirov has spent her career developing precisely these kinds of computational approaches, helping establish data science as a central pillar of biomedical research. Her work has contributed to widely used computational tools and analytical frameworks that enable researchers to interpret complex genomic information and identify molecular mechanisms underlying disease.

Beyond bioinformatics

The title “computational biology” scarcely captures the breadth of modern biomedical computing.
 
Today’s computational scientists build machine-learning models capable of identifying previously unknown cancer subtypes, predicting patient responses to therapy, reconstructing cellular signaling networks, and discovering molecular biomarkers hidden within enormous genomic datasets.
 
Each of these workflows requires sophisticated numerical methods executed across large-scale computing systems.
 
Genome-wide association studies routinely analyze millions of genetic variants across hundreds of thousands of individuals.
 
Single-cell RNA sequencing experiments may profile millions of cells simultaneously.
 
Deep-learning pathology systems process gigapixel microscope images using thousands of GPU cores.
 
Drug discovery platforms evaluate billions of molecular interactions through simulation and AI-guided optimization.
 
Collectively, these workloads have made biomedical research one of the fastest-growing consumers of high-performance computing resources worldwide.

Supercomputers as biomedical instruments

Traditional scientific instruments observe nature.
 
Supercomputers increasingly function as instruments themselves.
 
Rather than collecting photons or particles, they construct mathematical representations of biological systems, allowing scientists to investigate processes that cannot be observed directly.
 
Large GPU clusters now train foundation models on genomic sequences, protein structures, electronic health records, and multimodal imaging data. These models can identify relationships that would be impossible for human investigators to recognize manually.
 
Increasingly, biological discovery begins not in the laboratory but inside large-scale computational infrastructure.
 
This shift explains why research institutions are investing heavily in computational leadership alongside experimental expertise.
 
By recruiting Mesirov, Sanford Burnham Prebys is reinforcing the idea that future biomedical breakthroughs will emerge from close integration between laboratory science and advanced computing. The institute has emphasized expanding capabilities in data science and AI as part of its broader research strategy.

AI changes the scale of discovery

Artificial intelligence is rapidly changing every stage of biomedical research.
 
Deep neural networks now predict protein structures with remarkable accuracy.
 
Generative AI models assist researchers in designing new therapeutic molecules.
 
Machine learning accelerates image segmentation, genomic classification, biomarker discovery, and clinical decision support.
 
Yet AI itself depends upon extraordinary computational infrastructure.
 
Training state-of-the-art biomedical foundation models requires clusters containing thousands of GPUs connected through high-bandwidth interconnects, supported by distributed storage systems capable of delivering terabytes of data every second.
 
The resulting computational demands rival those of traditional scientific supercomputing applications.
 
As AI becomes embedded within biomedical research, institutions capable of combining biological expertise with leadership-class computing infrastructure will possess a growing competitive advantage.

The rise of computational medicine

Medicine is steadily becoming a predictive science.
 
Instead of reacting after disease develops, researchers increasingly seek to model disease progression before symptoms appear.
 
Digital representations of tumors can simulate therapeutic response.
 
Network models identify previously unknown disease pathways.
 
Multiomic analyses reveal subtle molecular signatures long before conventional diagnostics detect abnormalities.
 
These capabilities depend upon sophisticated computational pipelines integrating simulation, statistical inference, machine learning, uncertainty quantification, and large-scale data management.
 
Each represents a mature discipline within high-performance computing.
 
Rather than replacing laboratory experiments, supercomputers now guide them.
 
Scientists can prioritize promising therapeutic targets computationally before committing years of experimental effort.
 
This dramatically shortens the path from hypothesis to discovery.

Converging scientific disciplines

The significance of Mesirov’s appointment extends beyond cancer research.
 
It reflects a broader transformation occurring across scientific computing.
 
Historically, computational biology evolved separately from traditional HPC disciplines such as computational fluid dynamics, astrophysics, and climate modeling.
 
Today, those boundaries are dissolving.
 
Shared technologies, including GPU acceleration, distributed computing, cloud-native workflows, AI frameworks, high-performance storage, and advanced visualization, are becoming universal scientific tools.
 
The same accelerator architectures used to simulate galaxy formation now train genomic foundation models.
 
Parallel computing techniques originally developed for physics increasingly drive precision medicine.
 
The future of supercomputing is no longer defined by scientific discipline.
 
It is defined by computational capability.

Building the next generation of discovery

Perhaps the most inspiring aspect of this appointment is what it represents for the future of biomedical research.
 
Scientific progress has always depended upon better instruments.
 
Microscopes revealed cells.
 
DNA sequencers revealed genomes.
 
Today, supercomputers reveal patterns hidden within biological complexity.
 
Every additional GPU, every faster interconnect, every more efficient algorithm expands researchers’ ability to understand disease at unprecedented resolution.
 
By bringing one of computational biology’s most influential leaders to Sanford Burnham Prebys, the institute is making a clear statement about where biomedical science is headed.
 
The laboratories of the future will still contain microscopes, sequencers, and imaging systems.
 
But they will also rely upon leadership-class computing clusters, artificial intelligence, and computational scientists capable of translating massive datasets into actionable biological knowledge.
 
For the supercomputing community, that evolution represents one of the most exciting frontiers in computational science.
 
The next life-saving medical breakthrough may not emerge solely from a laboratory bench.
 
It may first appear within the processors of a supercomputer, where mathematics, biology, and artificial intelligence converge to reveal discoveries that would otherwise remain invisible.
Featured

Meta’s next frontier may not be social media; it may be supercomputing

Tyler O'Neal, Staff Editor July 1, 2026, 10:30 am

Reported plans to commercialize AI infrastructure could transform Meta from one of the world’s largest consumers of supercomputing into one of its largest providers.

This transition signifies a fundamental shift in the global technological landscape, where the primary barrier to entry for AI innovation is no longer just talent or algorithms, but the sheer availability of high-performance hardware. As Meta pivots toward potentially offering commercial cloud services, it underscores the realization that compute power has surpassed traditional software assets in strategic importance.
 
Key Implications of Meta’s Potential Infrastructure Commercialization:
  • Commoditization of Compute: Access to high-density GPU clusters is evolving into a utility-like resource, placing it alongside electricity and bandwidth as a foundational requirement for enterprise growth.
  • Capital Efficiency: By monetizing currently idle capacity, Meta can offset the staggering costs of its multi-billion dollar data center investments, turning depreciating capital expenditures into robust revenue streams.
  • Expansion of the AI Ecosystem: Lowering the barrier to accessing world-class training environments democratizes the ability for smaller enterprises and research institutions to develop frontier-level AI models without the impossible cost of building their own physical infrastructure.
  • Structural Market Shift: This move threatens to disrupt the existing cloud hierarchy, challenging incumbents like AWS and Azure while also putting pressure on specialized AI cloud startups that previously occupied this niche.
  • Convergence with Scientific Computing: The blurring lines between large-scale AI training and traditional HPC workloads suggest that the future of scientific discovery, from medicine to climate science, will increasingly rely on the same infrastructure originally engineered for social media recommendation engines and LLMs.
The move marks a departure from the “walled garden” approach of previous tech eras. By inviting outside developers to run workloads on its proprietary systems, Meta is signaling that the competitive advantage in the next decade will belong to those who provide the foundational machinery upon which the rest of the industry is built. If this infrastructure becomes a public or semi-public utility, the company will have effectively positioned itself as the underlying engine of the broader artificial intelligence economy.

A different kind of supercomputer

Traditional supercomputers have historically been constructed for a single organization.
 
National laboratories build machines for scientific discovery.
 
Universities construct clusters for research.
 
Enterprises deploy HPC systems to solve engineering and manufacturing problems.
 
Meta’s infrastructure follows a different philosophy.
 
Rather than running tightly coupled scientific workloads using MPI-based parallelism, Meta’s AI clusters are optimized for enormous distributed training jobs involving trillions of model parameters. Tens of thousands of GPUs communicate simultaneously using ultra-high-bandwidth fabrics, while advanced storage systems stream petabytes of training data to accelerator nodes with minimal latency.
 
Although these systems differ architecturally from traditional capability-class supercomputers, they represent some of the largest computational installations ever assembled.
 
Their purpose is not climate modeling or astrophysics.
 
Their purpose is intelligence.
 
If Bloomberg’s reporting proves accurate, Meta may soon begin exposing that infrastructure to external users, allowing organizations to rent access to the same GPU clusters powering the company’s AI ambitions.

The economics of AI infrastructure

Modern AI data centers require investments measured not in millions but in tens of billions of dollars.
 
Each facility demands thousands of GPUs, advanced networking equipment, liquid cooling systems, substations, backup power generation, and increasingly dedicated energy sources capable of supporting hundreds of megawatts of continuous operation.
 
Meta has guided toward AI infrastructure spending as high as $145 billion in 2026, reflecting one of the largest capital investment programs in computing history. Industry-wide, major technology companies are expected to spend well over $700 billion on AI infrastructure this year.
 
Such investments fundamentally change the economics of computing.
 
Historically, cloud providers built infrastructure after customer demand materialized.
 
Today’s AI race reverses that model.
 
Companies are constructing enormous GPU capacity first, anticipating future demand for model training, inference, and agentic AI workloads.
 
The consequence is inevitable: At certain times, portions of these massive AI supercomputers will sit idle.
 
Commercializing unused capacity transforms what would otherwise be depreciating capital assets into revenue-generating infrastructure.

Compute becomes the product

The reported initiative reflects a broader industry trend.
 
Increasingly, the most valuable product is not necessarily the AI model itself.
 
It is the computational platform that can train and serve those models.

This distinction matters.

Training frontier AI models requires extraordinary computational density, often involving synchronized execution across thousands of accelerators connected through high-speed interconnects such as InfiniBand or custom Ethernet fabrics. These systems incorporate distributed storage, sophisticated scheduling software, fault-tolerant checkpointing, and optimized collective communication libraries that maximize GPU utilization.
 
Building such environments requires years of engineering experience.
 
For many enterprises, renting access to an existing AI supercomputer is significantly more practical than constructing one internally.
 
Should Meta commercialize its infrastructure, it would effectively be selling access not merely to GPUs, but to one of the world’s most sophisticated AI computing environments.

Challenging the AI cloud landscape

The reported strategy would position Meta alongside established hyperscale cloud providers while simultaneously challenging specialized AI infrastructure companies.
 
Unlike traditional cloud platforms that evolved from general-purpose virtual machines, AI infrastructure providers focus on delivering accelerator-rich environments optimized specifically for machine learning workloads.
 
This emerging “AI cloud” market emphasizes:
  • Massive GPU clusters
  • High-bandwidth networking
  • Distributed AI training
  • Inference optimization
  • Foundation model hosting
  • Large-scale storage architectures
  • Advanced orchestration software
Bloomberg reported that Meta is evaluating both raw compute rentals and hosted AI model services, similar to existing offerings that allow developers to access foundation models without managing underlying infrastructure.
 
That combination would allow customers to choose between renting hardware directly or consuming AI models as managed services.

From internal infrastructure to public utility

Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the reported strategy is philosophical rather than technical.
 
For much of its history, Meta’s infrastructure existed solely to support Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and the company’s internal AI research.
 
Opening those systems to outside developers would fundamentally change their role.
 
Instead of operating as private computational assets, they would become shared digital infrastructure supporting thousands of organizations.
 
This transition mirrors an earlier evolution in computing.
 
Amazon Web Services originated from infrastructure Amazon built for its own retail operations before becoming the world’s largest cloud platform.
 
Many observers now wonder whether AI infrastructure is entering a similar phase.
 
The difference is scale.
 
Modern AI clusters rival traditional leadership-class supercomputers in computational capability while serving entirely different workloads.

Implications for scientific computing

Although the reported initiative targets enterprise AI, its implications extend into scientific computing.
 
Many HPC applications increasingly incorporate machine learning alongside traditional numerical simulation.
 
Drug discovery combines molecular dynamics with foundation models.
 
Climate science augments numerical weather prediction using neural networks.
 
Materials science integrates density functional theory with AI-guided search.
 
Access to large GPU clusters is becoming essential across nearly every computational discipline.
 
If additional commercial AI infrastructure becomes available, research institutions may benefit from expanded computational capacity without bearing the enormous capital costs associated with constructing comparable systems.
 
The distinction between AI infrastructure and scientific supercomputing continues to blur.
 
Increasingly, they are converging into a single computational ecosystem.

Infrastructure becomes the competitive advantage

Perhaps the most important lesson is that the AI race is evolving.
 
The first phase centered on developing larger language models.
 
The second emphasized acquiring the world’s best AI researchers.
 
The emerging third phase focuses on infrastructure itself.
 
Owning vast computational resources is becoming a strategic advantage comparable to owning intellectual property.
 
The companies capable of deploying gigawatts of power, networking hundreds of thousands of accelerators, and operating hyperscale AI clusters may ultimately possess the strongest competitive position, not simply because they build better models, but because they own the machines on which future models will be trained.
 
If Meta ultimately launches a commercial compute business, it would underscore a profound shift in the economics of artificial intelligence.
 
The world’s largest social networking company would also become one of the world’s largest supercomputing providers.
 
For the HPC community, that possibility reinforces an increasingly clear reality.
 
The future of artificial intelligence will not be determined solely by algorithms.
 
It will be determined by who owns, builds, and operates the supercomputers capable of bringing those algorithms to life.
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