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IBM's Historic stock collapse raises questions for the future of enterprise supercomputing
IBM's Historic stock collapse raises questions for the future of enterprise supercomputing
AI supercharges the hunt for stronger magnets: Iowa State researchers launch a new era of intelligent materials discovery
AI supercharges the hunt for stronger magnets: Iowa State researchers launch a new era of intelligent materials discovery
Supercomputers uncover a new class of cosmic explosions hidden in plain sight
Supercomputers uncover a new class of cosmic explosions hidden in plain sight
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?
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Featured

IBM's Historic stock collapse raises questions for the future of enterprise supercomputing

Tyler O'Neal, Staff Editor July 14, 2026, 12:00 pm
IBM has successfully navigated over a century of technological shifts, spanning from punch cards and mainframes to the current frontiers of cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and quantum research. However, the company faced a historic reckoning on Tuesday when preliminary second-quarter 2026 financial results triggered a 25% plunge in its share price. This sudden decline, which erased over $65 billion in market value, follows a rare earnings miss that snapped a five-year streak of meeting Wall Street expectations.
 
For those in the high-performance computing (HPC) community, the immediate concern is not the volatility of IBM’s stock, but the potential impact on the company’s long-term commitment to supercomputing, enterprise AI infrastructure, and quantum innovation. A closer look at the data suggests that the reality for IBM’s research-driven future is more complex than the market’s sharp reaction might imply.

The problem was infrastructure, not research

In a letter to investors, IBM Chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna acknowledged that the company "faltered" during the quarter.
 
IBM expects second-quarter revenue of approximately $17.2 billion, up just 1% year over year but below analyst expectations. Infrastructure revenue declined 7%, while software revenue still increased 5%. Consulting remained essentially flat.
 
Krishna attributed much of the weakness to disappointing performance in IBM's z17 mainframe rollout and the associated transaction-processing software ecosystem. Customer purchasing patterns also shifted unexpectedly as organizations accelerated spending on servers, storage systems, and memory ahead of anticipated price increases, delaying major software and infrastructure purchases. IBM also acknowledged that several significant enterprise deals failed to close during the quarter.
 
From an HPC perspective, this distinction matters.
 
IBM's earnings miss was driven primarily by execution and timing in enterprise infrastructure, not by a collapse in demand for advanced computing technologies.

What this means for IBM's supercomputing business

IBM occupies a unique position in the HPC ecosystem.
 
Unlike NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel, IBM's supercomputing strategy spans several complementary technologies:
  • Enterprise AI infrastructure
  • Power processors
  • Mainframe computing
  • Hybrid cloud through Red Hat
  • Quantum computing
  • Research partnerships with national laboratories
  • AI software platforms
While the disappointing infrastructure results certainly create near-term uncertainty, none directly suggest that IBM is retreating from supercomputing research.
 
In fact, the opposite appears true.
 
Even as it announced weaker-than-expected quarterly results, IBM reaffirmed plans to invest more than $10 billion in quantum computing over the next five years, alongside continued investments in AI software, semiconductor manufacturing, and its open-source ecosystem.
 
That distinction is critical.
 
Wall Street punished IBM for missing quarterly expectations.
 
IBM's long-range computational research strategy remains largely intact.

The AI investment paradox

Ironically, artificial intelligence may have contributed indirectly to IBM's disappointing quarter.
 
Across the technology industry, organizations continue pouring unprecedented amounts of capital into GPU clusters, AI accelerators, networking hardware, memory, and storage infrastructure.
 
Those investments are enormous.
 
For many enterprise customers, budgets are finite.
 
Instead of expanding software spending, many customers appear to be redirecting capital toward building AI-ready infrastructure first.
 
IBM itself acknowledged that this shift affected customer purchasing behavior during the quarter. Analysts have also pointed to broader market concerns that AI spending is temporarily crowding out traditional enterprise IT investments.
 
For companies serving enterprise infrastructure, this creates an unusual challenge.
 
Customers still believe in AI.
 
They are simply buying different components first.

HPC customers should not panic

Large-scale supercomputing deployments typically operate on multi-year procurement cycles.
 
National laboratories.
 
Government agencies.
 
Universities.
 
Energy companies.
 
Pharmaceutical firms.
 
These customers rarely alter procurement strategies because of one disappointing earnings report.
 
IBM's participation in advanced computing extends far beyond quarterly financial performance.
 
Its Power architecture continues supporting numerous enterprise HPC workloads.
 
Its hybrid-cloud technologies remain deeply embedded throughout research computing.
 
Its quantum roadmap continues attracting significant government and industrial investment.
 
None of those initiatives disappear because Wall Street reacted negatively to one quarter.

But investors are sending a message

While IBM's technological roadmap remains compelling, investors clearly expect better operational execution.
 
Krishna himself acknowledged that IBM underestimated how dramatically customer priorities would shift and admitted the company failed to adapt quickly enough.
 
That admission is significant.
 
Today's enterprise computing market evolves faster than ever.
 
Organizations now make infrastructure decisions based on AI readiness, GPU availability, semiconductor supply chains, cybersecurity concerns, and cloud economics, all simultaneously.
 
Execution matters just as much as innovation.

Could this affect future HPC investments?

The greatest risk may not be immediate budget reductions but increased scrutiny.
 
Public companies experiencing sharp stock declines often face pressure to:
  • Improve operational efficiency
  • Prioritize higher-return investments
  • Delay lower-priority initiatives
  • Reduce operating costs
  • Demonstrate faster returns on capital
Historically, IBM has protected long-term research better than many technology companies during downturns.
 
The company's continued commitment to quantum computing suggests management still views advanced computational research as a strategic differentiator rather than a discretionary expense.
 
However, investors will likely expect clearer evidence that these long-term investments translate into stronger commercial performance.

A difficult quarter does not end IBM's HPC leadership

IBM remains one of the few companies simultaneously developing AI software, enterprise infrastructure, quantum computing, advanced processors, hybrid cloud platforms, and large-scale research systems.
 
That breadth continues to distinguish it from most competitors.
 
Nevertheless, Tuesday's historic sell-off illustrates an uncomfortable reality.
 
Technological leadership alone no longer guarantees investor confidence.
 
Markets increasingly demand both breakthrough innovation and flawless execution.
 
For the supercomputing sector, IBM’s recent earnings shortfall should be viewed less as an existential crisis for HPC and more as a crucial reminder that even industry stalwarts must demonstrate agility in an AI-dominated market. The coming quarters will clarify whether this sharp market reaction marks a transient setback during a broader technological transition or the catalyst for a fundamental reassessment of IBM’s enterprise infrastructure strategy. While IBM’s research engine remains robust, its quantum ambitions are bold, and its HPC footprint is significant, the company’s immediate challenge lies in proving to investors that these long-term technological strengths can once again be synthesized into consistent, high-value financial performance.
Featured

AI supercharges the hunt for stronger magnets: Iowa State researchers launch a new era of intelligent materials discovery

O’NEAL July 13, 2026, 6:00 am
Traditional methods of discovering magnetic materials are hindered by an inefficient, labor-intensive cycle of synthesis and characterization that requires thousands of iterative experiments to achieve marginal improvements. Given the vast chemical search space, this trial-and-error approach is inherently slow and resource-heavy.
 
The research initiative at Iowa State University addresses these limitations by integrating artificial intelligence with high-performance computing to create a streamlined, autonomous discovery engine. In this framework, AI algorithms analyze complex datasets to identify patterns and predict promising chemical combinations, while supercomputers perform the necessary quantum mechanical calculations and simulations to validate these candidates before physical synthesis. This collaborative model shifts the paradigm from reactive experimentation to proactive, AI-guided discovery, effectively optimizing laboratory workflows, reducing dependency on rare earth elements, and drastically accelerating the development of next-generation materials.
 
Each experiment can consume days or weeks.
 
The search space, meanwhile, contains millions of possible chemical combinations.
 
This is precisely the kind of problem where artificial intelligence excels.
 
Instead of blindly exploring an enormous design space, machine learning algorithms can recognize hidden relationships among chemical compositions, crystal structures, electronic behavior, and magnetic performance. They rapidly identify the most promising candidates, allowing researchers to focus laboratory resources where success is most likely. 

AI Becomes a Scientific Partner

The Iowa State project, led by chemist Kirill Kovnir, aims to merge AI-guided prediction with advanced synthesis methods to dramatically accelerate materials discovery.
 
Rather than replacing scientists, the AI serves as an intelligent partner.
 
It continuously analyzes experimental data, identifies patterns invisible to human researchers, predicts promising compounds, and helps determine which materials deserve expensive laboratory testing.
 
The result is a feedback loop where experimentation improves AI models, while improved AI models produce even better experiments.
 
This "closed-loop" approach is rapidly becoming one of the defining paradigms of modern computational science.

Beyond Machine Learning: The Rise of Intelligent Discovery

What makes projects like this especially significant is that they represent the convergence of several computational disciplines:
  • * Machine learning
  • * Materials informatics
  • * High-throughput computational chemistry
  • * Data-driven materials synthesis
  • * Physics-based simulation
  • * Automated laboratory experimentation
Instead of treating these technologies separately, researchers are integrating them into a unified discovery platform.
 
Artificial intelligence generates hypotheses.
 
Computational models evaluate them.
 
Laboratory synthesis validates them.
 
Experimental data retrains the AI.
 
The cycle repeats, becoming faster and smarter with every iteration.
 
Scientists increasingly describe this workflow as an "autonomous discovery engine."

Why Supercomputers Still Matter

Although artificial intelligence often receives the headlines, none of these advances would be possible without enormous computational infrastructure.
 
Training scientific AI models requires processing vast databases containing crystal structures, quantum mechanical calculations, experimental measurements, and decades of published literature.
 
Many candidate materials undergo density functional theory (DFT) calculations, electronic-structure simulations, and atomistic modeling before researchers even attempt to synthesize them.
 
These calculations routinely consume thousands, or even millions, of CPU and GPU hours on modern supercomputers.
 
High-performance computing enables researchers to virtually evaluate enormous numbers of potential materials before entering the laboratory.
 
This dramatically reduces experimental cost while increasing the likelihood of breakthrough discoveries.
 
The result is a powerful partnership:
  • * AI decides what to investigate.
  • * HPC calculates how it behaves.
  • * Scientists determine why it matters.

Reducing Dependence on Rare Earth Elements

One of the long-term goals driving this research is reducing dependence on rare earth elements.
 
Today's strongest permanent magnets typically require materials such as neodymium and dysprosium.
 
These critical minerals are expensive, difficult to obtain, and concentrated within relatively small global supply chains.
 
Finding alternatives could have enormous economic and geopolitical consequences.
 
Recent AI-driven research at Ames National Laboratory has already demonstrated how physics-informed machine learning can identify promising rare-earth-free magnetic materials far more efficiently than traditional discovery methods. Rather than relying exclusively on incremental laboratory experimentation, researchers are combining high-throughput simulations, physical modeling, and reasoning-based AI to narrow the search before materials are ever synthesized.

Artificial Intelligence Is Reshaping Scientific Research

The Iowa State initiative reflects a much broader shift occurring across scientific computing.
 
Only a few years ago, AI primarily analyzed experimental data after discoveries had already been made.
 
Today, AI is helping formulate hypotheses before experiments begin.
 
Researchers are increasingly treating artificial intelligence not merely as an analytical tool, but as an active participant in scientific reasoning.
 
Across chemistry, biology, climate science, astronomy, and materials engineering, AI systems now recommend experiments, optimize laboratory workflows, predict molecular behavior, and uncover relationships hidden within datasets far too large for humans to analyze manually.
 
Scientific discovery itself is becoming computational.

Inspiring the Next Generation

Perhaps the most exciting aspect of this work is what it represents for future scientists.
 
Tomorrow's materials researchers will need expertise that spans chemistry, physics, computer science, artificial intelligence, and high-performance computing.
 
The laboratory of the future will not consist solely of beakers and furnaces.
 
It will also include GPU clusters, machine learning frameworks, autonomous optimization software, and intelligent simulation pipelines working together to guide discovery.
 
Students entering science today will increasingly collaborate with AI systems that help generate hypotheses, evaluate competing theories, and recommend entirely new directions for exploration.
 
Rather than diminishing the role of human creativity, these technologies amplify it.

The Future of Discovery Is Computational

The Iowa State project illustrates a profound transformation underway across scientific research.
 
Artificial intelligence is no longer confined to analyzing data after experiments conclude. It is becoming a central engine of discovery itself, helping scientists navigate immense design spaces, prioritize experiments, and accelerate innovation at a pace unimaginable only a decade ago.
 
For the high-performance computing community, that evolution carries a powerful message.
 
The world's next generation of advanced materials will not emerge solely from laboratories. They will emerge from the seamless integration of AI, simulation, supercomputing, and experimental science.
 
As these technologies continue to converge, the discovery of stronger magnets may prove to be just one example of a much larger revolution, one in which artificial intelligence and supercomputing become the twin engines driving scientific progress across every field of research.
Featured

Supercomputers uncover a new class of cosmic explosions hidden in plain sight

O’NEAL July 8, 2026, 1:32 pm

High-performance simulations reveal that the mysterious transient AT2019ijn may be powered by an off-axis relativistic jet from an intermediate-mass black hole, opening a new frontier in time-domain astrophysics.

Modern astronomy has entered an era where telescopes no longer make discoveries in isolation. Increasingly, the most profound scientific breakthroughs arise from a powerful synergy between observational surveys and high-performance computing. While modern instruments can detect extraordinary events billions of light-years away, deciphering their nature often relies on sophisticated numerical modeling to reconstruct the underlying physics.
 
A compelling example is the transient AT2019ijn, an unusual optical and radio outburst that defies conventional classification. Characterized by a rapid rise in brightness, a prolonged blue phase, and an exceptionally bright, long-lasting radio afterglow, the event fits poorly into established categories like supernovae or fast blue optical transients (LFBOTs), suggesting it represents an entirely new phenomenon.
 
This discovery is particularly significant for the high-performance computing community because it could not have been understood through observation alone. Successfully reconstructing one of the most energetic explosions ever observed in a dwarf galaxy required a complex suite of computational tools, including large-scale Bayesian inference, relativistic jet simulations, Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) optimization, synchrotron emission modeling, and tidal disruption event (TDE) fitting.

An explosion that refused to fit the rules

AT2019ijn was discovered in the nucleus of a dwarf galaxy approximately 3.4 billion light-years away (redshift 0.2729). It reached an optical luminosity of about –21 magnitude in just over five days before fading over more than a month while maintaining a remarkably high blackbody temperature of roughly 15,000–16,000 K. These characteristics resemble fast blue optical transients, yet its slow decay is far more typical of tidal disruption events or superluminous supernovae. The real surprise came hundreds of days later.
 
Radio observations revealed emission that continued to rise long after the optical flash had faded, peaking 641 days after discovery at a luminosity of around 2 × 10³¹ erg s⁻¹ Hz⁻¹, more than an order of magnitude brighter than previously known radio-bright LFBOTs and comparable to relativistic jetted tidal disruption events. Such behavior immediately suggested that conventional explosion models were insufficient.

Turning observations into physics

Understanding the source required far more than comparing observations with previous events. The research team combined observational astronomy with advanced computational astrophysics to determine which physical scenario best reproduced every aspect of the transient.
 
Their first step involved fitting the optical spectral energy distribution using an MCMC framework with 64 walkers and 2,000 sampling steps to estimate the evolving temperature, luminosity, and emitting radius of the transient. These calculations established the unusually persistent thermal properties that distinguish AT2019ijn from known fast optical transients. The radio observations presented an even greater computational challenge.

Modeling a relativistic jet

To explain the delayed radio brightening, the researchers investigated whether AT2019ijn launched a relativistic jet pointed away from Earth. They employed VegasAfterglow, a high-performance numerical framework designed for multiwavelength afterglow simulations and Bayesian parameter estimation. The software models how relativistic jets propagate through the interstellar medium while accounting for synchrotron radiation, relativistic beaming, jet geometry, and energy transport.
 
The parameter space explored was enormous. The simulations considered initial Lorentz factors between 5 and 1,000, isotropic-equivalent jet energies spanning six orders of magnitude, interstellar medium densities covering five orders of magnitude, jet opening angles from 0° to 30°, and viewing angles ranging from directly on-axis to completely off-axis. Each candidate solution was evaluated through MCMC optimization using 16 walkers and one million sampling steps.
 
Such large Bayesian searches are precisely the kind of workload that benefits from leadership-class supercomputing systems, where thousands of parameter combinations can be evaluated simultaneously.

The best-fitting universe

The simulations converged on a remarkably energetic solution. The preferred model indicates that AT2019ijn produced a narrow relativistic jet with an opening angle of roughly 7°–10°, viewed from approximately 40° off-axis. The inferred isotropic-equivalent kinetic energy approaches 10⁵⁴ erg—comparable to the most energetic relativistic explosions known.
 
Because the jet was not pointed directly toward Earth, relativistic beaming initially suppressed the radio signal. As the jet slowed while interacting with surrounding gas, its emission gradually entered our line of sight, naturally producing the observed radio peak more than 600 days after the optical outburst. Without computational modeling, this delayed evolution would have remained difficult to interpret.

Testing competing physical models

The study did not stop with jet modeling. Researchers also examined whether the optical emission could originate from a newly born magnetar, a rapidly rotating neutron star with an extremely strong magnetic field. Bayesian fitting reproduced several optical properties, suggesting a millisecond spin period and magnetic field near 10¹⁴ gauss. However, the enormous radio energy proved difficult to reconcile with a magnetar unless highly specialized conditions were invoked.
 
The team then modeled the event using MOSFiT, a widely used computational framework for tidal disruption events. The best-fitting solution involved an intermediate-mass black hole of approximately 10⁵ solar masses disrupting a low-mass star. Bayesian model evaluation using the Widely Applicable Information Criterion (WAIC) indicated that this scenario is consistent with known tidal disruption events while naturally explaining the unusually rapid rise of the transient. Combining the optical fits, radio simulations, and host galaxy properties led the researchers to favor a jetted tidal disruption event involving an intermediate-mass black hole.

Supercomputing changes time-domain astronomy

The broader significance extends well beyond a single transient. Future observatories, including the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the Square Kilometre Array, and the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, will discover millions of transient events every year. Finding them will no longer be the limiting factor. Interpreting them will.
 
Each newly detected transient may require thousands or millions of numerical realizations spanning relativistic hydrodynamics, radiation transport, Bayesian inference, jet evolution, and statistical model comparison before astronomers can identify its physical origin. The bottleneck is rapidly shifting from telescope sensitivity to computational capability.

The next generation of discovery

AT2019ijn may ultimately represent the first recognized member of a previously unknown family of relativistic optical transients. The authors conclude that combining wide-field optical surveys with deep radio monitoring will be essential for discovering additional examples and determining how frequently intermediate-mass black holes launch relativistic jets. For the supercomputing community, the message is equally compelling.
 
The future of transient astronomy will not be defined solely by larger telescopes or more sensitive detectors. It will be shaped by the computational power needed to recreate extreme astrophysical environments, evaluate millions of possible universes, and identify the one that best matches reality. In that sense, every new supercomputer becomes more than a scientific instrument. It becomes a machine capable of revealing the hidden engines powering the most extraordinary explosions in the cosmos.
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