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Researchers at MIT are developing a new kind of sensor that detects cancer-related signals inside the bladder and emits a fluorescent light to reveal their presence. By using these nanosensors to map bladder cancer biomarkers in real time, this approach could transform how we monitor and diagnose the disease.
A new storytelling project titled Curiosity on a Mission champions the long-horizon science that powers American innovation. The MIT effort highlights how basic research sparks enormous advances in medicine, technology, national security, and economic growth.
Explore the origin and global impact of MIT OpenCourseWare, a pioneering initiative that challenged traditional educational models. Discover how the commitment to making knowledge accessible to everyone has shaped online learning and inspired a worldwide movement toward open education for learners everywhere.
In MIT's Elements of Mechanical Design course, students apply theoretical concepts from core engineering classes to build high-precision machines. Through lab work and shop time, they bridge the gap between academics and practical application, developing the hands-on expertise and confidence necessary to excel as professional engineers.
What if time could be measured with near-perfect precision? Atomic clocks do exactly that, using atoms as nature’s most reliable timekeepers. Here’s how they work and why modern life depends on them.