supercluster

Definition of superclusternext

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of supercluster An enormous supercluster made up from over 20 individual galaxy clusters hiding behind our dusty Milky Way is even larger than astronomers had thought, affecting the motion through space of all the galaxies and galaxy clusters in our corner of the cosmos. Keith Cooper, Space.com, 4 May 2026 Venice features a radical redesign with up to 512 threads per package, specifically optimized for the orchestration layers of AI superclusters. Trefis Team, Forbes.com, 22 Apr. 2026 The project timeline The supercomputer’s construction was kicked off after xAI acquired a 1M sq ft warehouse in Memphis, along with adjacent land, forming the physical footprint for the next phase of the supercluster. Atharva Gosavi, Interesting Engineering, 19 Jan. 2026 The companies aim to power Meta's Prometheus supercluster computing system. Jim Cramer, CNBC, 9 Jan. 2026 Presidents are routinely briefed on major economic data reports the night before they … Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, announced deals Friday with three nuclear energy companies to help power its AI infrastructure, including the tech giant’s forthcoming Prometheus supercluster. Julia Shapero, The Hill, 9 Jan. 2026 In the early 2010s, Courtois was part of the team that discovered and described the Laniakea supercluster of galaxies to which our Milky Way belongs. Caroline Carlson, Literary Hub, 3 Nov. 2025
Recent Examples of Synonyms for supercluster
Noun
  • The redshift of the quasar's light also lowered the frequency of the fluctuations.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 12 June 2026
  • The team spotted the distant quasar, an actively feeding supermassive black hole, using observations from the Subaru Telescope.
    Georgina Jedikovska, Interesting Engineering, 23 Jan. 2026
Noun
  • These hot, massive stars in the cluster end their lives after a few million years as supernova explosions, the blast waves and radiation from which can create bubbles in the gas light years across, creating further pathways for ultraviolet light to escape and be detected by Hubble.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 24 June 2026
  • Scientists believe the galactic wind is being driven by intense star formation and supernova explosions triggered by the merger, though a supermassive black hole could also be playing a role.
    Brandi D. Addison, USA Today, 23 June 2026
Noun
  • That is because, whereas previous research has suggested just a few hundred pulsars could be enough to account for the Galactic Center Excess, these findings indicate that the pulsar population at the heart of the Milky Way would have to be greater than 35,000.
    Robert Lea, Space.com, 21 June 2026
  • In 2023 a collaboration of radio astronomers reported tiny deviations in the timing of these flashes from dozens of pulsars in the Milky Way.
    Joseph Howlett, Scientific American, 18 June 2026
Noun
  • Located 7,200 light-years away, Cygnus X-1 features not only a black hole — the first one ever identified more than a half-century ago — but a blue supergiant star, its constant companion.
    Marcia Dunn, Los Angeles Times, 20 Apr. 2026
  • For instance, there are more than 30 supergiant fields, each holding 5 billion barrels or more of oil, around the Persian Gulf.
    Scott L. Montgomery, The Conversation, 7 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • The discrepancy often signals a missing variable, a changing market or a flawed assumption.
    Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 23 June 2026
  • The result was a giant variable-sweep-wing aircraft powered by four Kuznetsov NK-32 afterburning turbofan engines.
    Kaif Shaikh, Interesting Engineering, 23 June 2026
Noun
  • Hopefully, this will help determine whether they’re sparked by an eruption from a single neutron star, or when two of these tiny but massive bodies collide.
    Joseph Howlett, Scientific American, 18 June 2026
  • Since then, along with its fellow detectors Virgo and KAGRA, LIGO has detected gravitational waves from many mergers between pairs of black holes, pairs of ultra-dense neutron stars — and even mixed mergers between a black hole and a neutron star.
    Robert Lea, Space.com, 1 June 2026
Noun
  • Astronomers repeatedly attempted to fit subtle shifts in the brightness of T CrB to the few points of reliable historical data on offer, while accounting for fluctuations in the white dwarf's feeding rate.
    Anthony Wood, Space.com, 23 June 2026
  • The shedding creates a region of dust and gas around the star’s core — a white dwarf.
    Avni Trivedi, CNN Money, 8 June 2026
Noun
  • Then in the future, when the binary star component enters the red giant phase, long after the outer star has become a compact white dwarf, the mass transfer could begin again in the opposite direction, with matter falling onto the surface of the white dwarf.
    Keith Cooper, Space.com, 3 June 2026
  • Granted, this series has moving parts beyond its binary stars.
    Steven Louis Goldstein, New York Times, 18 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Supercluster.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/supercluster. Accessed 3 Jul. 2026.

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