supercluster

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of supercluster The full supercluster would have more than 1 million Ascend chips, according to Huawei. Evelyn Cheng, CNBC, 18 Sep. 2025 The chips designed by Huawei serve as the basis of the company’s AI infrastructure, in which a supercluster is connected to multiple superpods. Atharva Gosavi, Interesting Engineering, 18 Sep. 2025 Meta's first supercluster, called Prometheus, is slated to go live in 2026. Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 21 July 2025 The Milky Way, our home galaxy, is part of a different supercluster called Laniakea, which, at 500 million light-years wide, is dwarfed by the Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall. Robert Lea, Space.com, 20 Apr. 2025 This sell-off indicated a sense that the next wave of AI models may not require the tens of thousands of top-end GPUs that Silicon Valley behemoths have amassed into computing superclusters for the purposes of accelerating their AI innovation. Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 28 Jan. 2025 For instance, Oracle recently chose AMD’s accelerated computing chips to power its latest supercluster for high-intensity AI workloads, after testing showed that AMD’s GPUs delivered low latency and strong performance at a competitive price. Trefis Team, Forbes, 16 Jan. 2025 Clusters can clump up in the cosmos to form clusters of clusters, called superclusters. Phil Plait, Scientific American, 8 Mar. 2024
Recent Examples of Synonyms for supercluster
Noun
  • Additionally, this quasar is also producing jets of particles moving at nearly the speed of light, a rare feature among quasars.
    Rupendra Brahambhatt, Interesting Engineering, 21 Sep. 2025
  • In the late 1960s astronomers started to make extremely high-resolution observations of distant galaxies called quasars.
    Phil Plait, Scientific American, 29 Aug. 2025
Noun
  • Hubbard could be eased back into action, given that Dowdle has recently gone supernova.
    Andy Behrens, New York Times, 17 Oct. 2025
  • Oh sure, there’s the occasional supernova and a bit of unrest as huge gas clouds collide and start to form stars.
    Phil Plait, Scientific American, 16 Oct. 2025
Noun
  • Science fiction has, of course, been portraying exoplanets for decades, and in 1992, radio astronomers Dale Frail and Aleksander Wolszczan discovered planets orbiting a pulsar, the spinning remnant of a massive star that has gone supernova.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 6 Oct. 2025
  • The X-ray data, in purple, shows the hot gas/plasma created by the central pulsar, which is clearly identifiable in both the individual and the composite image.
    Ethan Siegel, Big Think, 12 Sep. 2025
Noun
  • The album title is a reference to a red supergiant star 10,000 light-years away from Earth.
    Tomás Mier, Rolling Stone, 18 Sep. 2025
  • Skywatchers on Saturday night will be treated to the gorgeous sight of a waxing crescent moon close to Antares, an unmistakably bright red supergiant star shining in the south.
    Jamie Carter, Forbes.com, 29 Aug. 2025
Noun
  • Even though novas are exceptionally bright, supernovas are brighter—reaching billions of times brighter than the sun at their peak.
    Elizabeth Gamillo, Smithsonian Magazine, 3 July 2025
  • Recorded live at the Lincoln Center, the band plays a bossa-nova take on the song while Gaga sings solo, wearing one of Cher’s own wigs.
    Kristen S. Hé, Vulture, 19 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • That will be the key variable in this entire season.
    Jeff Howe, New York Times, 25 Oct. 2025
  • Above all, Warrick said, timing remains the biggest variable in determining when and how companies can begin the refunding process.
    Sasha Rogelberg, Fortune, 23 Oct. 2025
Noun
  • As the collapsed core of a massive star, a neutron star is a small but incredibly dense object, packing up to three times the mass of our sun into a small volume.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 24 Oct. 2025
  • In the 10 years since then, scientists have detected hundreds of black holes coming together, as well as other extreme cosmic events like neutron stars colliding and black holes merging with a neutron star.
    Nell Greenfieldboyce, NPR, 11 Sep. 2025
Noun
  • Their relationship is even more involved than that — the gravitational pull of the white dwarf is actually stretching Wolf 1130A into an egg shape toward it.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 7 Oct. 2025
  • Another potential cause is a white dwarf — a dead star as heavy as our sun but condensed to the size of Earth — being ripped apart by a rare intermediate-mass black hole.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN Money, 22 Sep. 2025

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Supercluster.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/supercluster. Accessed 25 Oct. 2025.

More from Merriam-Webster on supercluster

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!