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Mapping a sea of light: Astronomers use supercomputers to probe the early Universe, but how much is signal vs. interpretation?
Mapping a sea of light: Astronomers use supercomputers to probe the early Universe, but how much is signal vs. interpretation?
New method improves precision of particle collision simulations
New method improves precision of particle collision simulations
CoreWeave, Perplexity forge a strategic HPC-driven AI partnership
CoreWeave, Perplexity forge a strategic HPC-driven AI partnership
AI agents open new frontiers in predicting preterm birth
AI agents open new frontiers in predicting preterm birth
Peering into cosmic darkness: Supercomputers illuminate one of the faintest galaxies ever seen
Peering into cosmic darkness: Supercomputers illuminate one of the faintest galaxies ever seen
Supercomputers tackle a stellar puzzle, but have we really solved it?
Supercomputers tackle a stellar puzzle, but have we really solved it?
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Featured

Mapping a sea of light: Astronomers use supercomputers to probe the early Universe, but how much is signal vs. interpretation?

Tyler O'Neal, Staff Editor March 10, 2026, 4:00 am
Astronomers at the McDonald Observatory, collaborating with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment, have created what they call the most detailed 3D map to date of faint hydrogen emissions from the early universe. This achievement is powered by massive data processing and supercomputing, highlighting both the opportunities and interpretive hurdles of computational cosmology.
 
This research seeks to map Lyman-alpha emission, the light given off when hydrogen atoms are energized by star formation, during a pivotal era about 9 to 11 billion years ago. The findings provide insight into how galaxies and intergalactic gas developed in this crucial period of cosmic history.
 
For HPC engineers and computational scientists, however, the project poses a key question: how much of the resulting map is based on direct observation, and how much is inferred through large-scale data processing?

Turning Half a Petabyte Into a Map

The raw data behind the project is formidable. Observations collected by the Hobby-Eberly Telescope produced more than 600 million spectra across a wide region of the sky. To process the data, researchers used supercomputing resources at the Texas Advanced Computing Center.
 
In total, roughly half a petabyte of observational data was sifted through using custom software pipelines designed to extract faint spectral signatures from the background noise.
 
This is a familiar workflow for HPC users: large-scale reduction pipelines, statistical signal extraction, and multi-stage modeling designed to convert massive observational datasets into structured scientific products.
 
But the map itself was not built by directly detecting every galaxy.
 
Instead, the team relied on a statistical technique known as line intensity mapping.

A Blurred Picture of the Cosmos

Traditional galaxy surveys attempt to catalog individual objects one by one. Intensity mapping takes a different approach: it measures the combined brightness of specific spectral lines across large regions of space, effectively capturing aggregate emission from both bright and faint sources simultaneously.
 
One scientist involved in the project compared the method to looking through a “smudged plane window,” the image is blurrier, but it reveals light from many otherwise invisible sources.
 
For HPC practitioners, this analogy should sound familiar. Intensity mapping is less about high-resolution object detection and more about statistical reconstruction from incomplete data, similar to techniques used in tomography, cosmological simulations, and signal processing.
 
In this case, the reconstruction relied on a computational assumption: regions near known bright galaxies are likely to host additional faint galaxies and intergalactic gas, due to the gravitational clustering of matter. The positions of bright galaxies were therefore used as anchors to infer the locations of surrounding faint structures.
 
This strategy dramatically increases the amount of usable information extracted from observational surveys, but it also introduces a layer of modeling.

When Data Analysis Becomes Astrophysics

The resulting map reveals what researchers describe as a “sea of light” filling the spaces between previously cataloged galaxies. The signal suggests the presence of numerous faint galaxies and diffuse hydrogen gas that traditional surveys have missed.
 
From a computational standpoint, the achievement is significant. Processing hundreds of millions of spectra and reconstructing a three-dimensional cosmic structure from partial signals requires large-scale parallel workflows, sophisticated statistical filtering, and high-throughput data handling.
 
But the skeptical HPC user might ask an uncomfortable question:

If the map relies partly on statistical inference and clustering assumptions, how much of the detected structure is truly observed, and how much is model-dependent reconstruction?

The researchers themselves acknowledge this tension. The new map, they say, can now serve as a reference point for testing cosmological simulations of the same epoch.

In other words, the observational data may help validate or challenge theoretical models that attempt to describe the early universe.

HPC’s Expanding Role in Observational Cosmology

Regardless of interpretive debates, the project highlights a growing trend in astronomy: observational science is becoming increasingly computational.
 
Large surveys such as HETDEX collect far more data than traditional analysis pipelines can process manually. Instead, researchers rely on supercomputers to filter, correlate, and model enormous datasets.
 
In practice, this means that discoveries increasingly emerge not just from telescopes, but from the intersection of instrumentation, algorithms, and HPC infrastructure.
 
For supercomputing engineers, this evolution presents both opportunity and responsibility. As astronomical datasets continue to scale toward the exabyte era, the distinction between data analysis and theoretical modeling will become increasingly intertwined.
 
And sometimes, the most important question is not simply what the universe is telling us, but how much of that message is being interpreted through the lens of our algorithms.
Featured

New method improves precision of particle collision simulations

Tyler O'Neal, Staff Editor March 6, 2026, 7:03 pm
High-energy particle physics is built on two essential foundations: cutting-edge accelerators and advanced computational techniques. Researchers at the Institute of Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Sciences, have now introduced a novel method that promises to greatly enhance the reliability of large-scale simulations, interpreting results from experiments like those at the Large Hadron Collider. This breakthrough holds significant promise for the supercomputing community.
 
A central challenge remains: how can computational physicists estimate the effects of calculations that are prohibitively resource-intensive to perform?

When Computation Meets the Limits of Physics

Modern particle physics experiments generate enormous datasets describing the aftermath of high-energy proton collisions. To interpret these events, scientists must compare experimental observations with theoretical predictions derived from complex numerical simulations based on quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and the Standard Model.
 
But the calculations required to simulate these interactions grow explosively in complexity. Perturbation theory, the mathematical framework typically used, expresses results as a series of corrections. Each successive order in the series represents a more precise description of the physics, but also requires dramatically more computational effort.
 
For large-scale collider simulations, computing higher-order corrections can become computationally prohibitive, even on modern HPC systems. As a result, physicists usually truncate the series after a manageable number of terms and then estimate the uncertainty introduced by the missing higher-order contributions.
 
The question, however, remains difficult: How large are the effects of the corrections that were never computed?

A New Approach to Estimating the Unknown

Physicists Matthew A. Lim of the University of Sussex and Dr. René Poncelet of IFJ PAN have proposed a new methodology for estimating these missing higher-order effects in perturbative calculations. Their work, published in Physical Review D, introduces a refined technique based on varying so-called nuisance parameters rather than relying solely on the traditional renormalization-scale variation method.
 
In the standard approach, theorists adjust the renormalization scale, a parameter linked to the energy scale of particle interactions, to evaluate how sensitive simulation results are to changes in that value. This variation provides a rough estimate of theoretical uncertainty.
 
The new method instead explores variations in physically interpretable parameters such as particle masses, coupling constants, or probability distribution functions. Because these quantities correspond more directly to measurable physics, the resulting uncertainty estimates can be less arbitrary and more grounded in experimental constraints.
 
For supercomputing engineers familiar with numerical modeling, the strategy resembles sensitivity analysis performed on large-scale simulations: perturb inputs within physically meaningful ranges and observe how the system responds.

Validating Against Real Collider Data

The researchers tested their framework across ten categories of proton-collision processes observed at the LHC. These included phenomena such as Higgs boson production, W and Z boson pair production, heavy-quark pair formation, and interactions generating gamma quanta and hadronic jets.
 
In cases where the traditional scale-variation approach already performed well, the new method yielded comparable results. However, in previously problematic scenarios, the nuisance-parameter technique produced more realistic uncertainty estimates, improving agreement between theoretical predictions and experimental observations.
 
According to Dr. Poncelet, the method offers a practical framework for estimating the impact of higher-order corrections in perturbative calculations, a capability that could sharpen the interpretation of collision data from both current and future accelerators.

Why This Matters for HPC

For the supercomputing community, the significance of the work extends beyond particle physics theory.
 
Large-scale collider simulations already consume vast computational resources across distributed HPC infrastructures worldwide. As researchers push toward higher precision, especially in the search for subtle deviations from the Standard Model that might signal new physics, computational demand continues to escalate.
 
Methods that improve the statistical reliability of truncated simulations can reduce the need for prohibitively expensive higher-order calculations while still preserving scientific accuracy. In other words, smarter mathematical frameworks can complement brute-force computing.
 
This interplay between algorithmic innovation and HPC capability is becoming increasingly central to modern scientific discovery. Even with the world’s fastest supercomputers, physicists cannot compute everything. The art lies in determining what must be calculated, what can be approximated, and how to quantify the difference.

Toward More Precise Digital Experiments

As next-generation particle accelerators and upgraded detectors deliver increasingly precise experimental data, theoretical models must advance alongside them. Improved methods for estimating uncertainty, such as the approach proposed by Lim and Poncelet, offer a practical way to keep simulations aligned with observations without demanding impractical levels of computational power.
 
For HPC engineers working at the intersection of physics and large-scale computation, the lesson is both technical and conceptual: improving simulations is not solely about building faster machines. It also requires better strategies for understanding and quantifying the uncertainties embedded within the equations that drive those simulations.
Featured

CoreWeave, Perplexity forge a strategic HPC-driven AI partnership

O'NEAL March 4, 2026, 8:00 am
CoreWeave, Inc. has entered a multi-year partnership with Perplexity AI to provide the infrastructure for Perplexity’s next-generation inference workloads via its specialized AI cloud platform. This strategic collaboration demonstrates how advanced HPC-grade architectures, especially GPU clusters optimized for AI inference, are enabling production-scale AI systems with stringent performance, scalability, and reliability demands.
 
The partnership centers on deploying Perplexity’s inference workloads on CoreWeave’s cloud infrastructure, leveraging dedicated NVIDIA GB200 NVL72-powered clusters to support the high throughput and low latency needed by Perplexity’s Sonar and Search API ecosystem as usage scales.

Inference at Scale: Technical Imperatives

AI inference, serving predictions from pre-trained models in real time, poses unique computational challenges compared with training. While training benefits from large batch sizes and long-duration GPU utilization, inference workloads demand ultra-low latency responses, predictable performance under bursty query patterns, and efficient resource utilization across multi-tenant clusters. For a company like Perplexity, which handles billions of user queries per month, infrastructure that can orchestrate inference workloads at scale with minimal jitter is critical.
 
CoreWeave’s platform is built on a Kubernetes-orchestrated service layer that abstracts and automates resource allocation across GPU clusters. By pairing container orchestration with dedicated hardware, specifically GB200 NVL72 accelerators, CoreWeave ensures that inference models can be deployed without rigid re-architecture while maintaining consistent latency profiles, even at peak demand. This pattern is particularly important as AI models grow in size and complexity, often requiring substantial GPU memory and bandwidth to serve real-time applications effectively.
 
From an engineering perspective, this deployment highlights several critical infrastructure considerations:
  • Workload specialization: Automated tiering of resources for inference vs. training, recognizing that inference tasks often require different memory and throughput characteristics than model training.
  • Latency control: Optimization of GPU-to-network pathways to reduce end-to-end inference time, a key metric for conversational AI and search APIs.
  • Scalability: Dynamic scaling mechanisms that transparently add or remove GPU nodes as load fluctuates, coupled with robust orchestration to prevent resource fragmentation.
  • Cost predictability: Infrastructure designed to avoid over-provisioning while meeting performance SLAs, aided by load-aware scheduling and GPU utilization monitoring. 
Perplexity has already begun running inference workloads on CoreWeave’s platform through its Kubernetes Service and is leveraging tools such as W&B Models to manage models from experimentation to production. This reflects a broader multi-cloud strategy that allows Perplexity to balance resilience, capacity, and vendor flexibility as its AI footprint expands.

Implications for the HPC Community

For supercomputing engineers and architects, this collaboration is emblematic of a broader trend: HPC technologies are transitioning from niche scientific workloads to mainstream AI infrastructure stacks. Traditionally, HPC clusters were associated with physics simulations, climate modeling, and other numerically intensive domains. Increasingly, similar architectures, especially GPU-centric clusters, are now critical for production AI services, requiring operational excellence not just in computational throughput but also in orchestration, fault tolerance, and real-time responsiveness.
 
Platforms like CoreWeave demonstrate that HPC principles, such as parallelism, memory hierarchy optimization, and workload specialization, are foundational to delivering commercial AI services at a global scale. For inference workloads in particular, engineers must consider not just peak compute, but sustained, predictable performance across thousands of queries per second.
 
This shift also presents opportunities for HPC professionals to influence how AI infrastructure evolves: from advising on cluster design and interconnect topologies to developing efficiency-aware scheduling policies that reduce energy consumption without sacrificing performance, an increasingly important consideration as production AI systems grow in scale and footprint.
 
In summary, the CoreWeave, Perplexity alliance exemplifies how cloud platforms purpose-built with HPC knowledge and advanced GPUs are forming the foundation of modern AI services. As inference workloads expand and diversify, platforms that consistently deliver high performance at scale will set themselves apart from general-purpose clouds, reshaping the architecture and deployment of AI applications across industries.
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