What happens when materials take tiny hits
High-speed camera shows incoming particles cause damage by briefly melting surfaces as they strike.
High-speed camera shows incoming particles cause damage by briefly melting surfaces as they strike.
CSAIL's new RePaint system aims to faithfully recreate your favorite paintings using deep learning and 3-D printing.
Injectable material made of nanoscale particles can deliver arthritis drugs throughout cartilage.
Device developed at MIT could provide refrigeration for off-grid locations.
Class takes first-year students through the stages of product design, from ideation and modeling to iteration and user testing.
The new center will explore how MIT can use virtual reality and artificial intelligence and other technologies to better serve human needs.
Generous $1 million gift recognizes the collaborations of the Research Laboratory of Electronics and the Technology Licensing Office to develop MIT intellectual property.
MIT AI Ethics Reading Group was founded by students who saw firsthand how technology developed with good intentions could be problematic.
In a return to MIT, 2018 workshop drew 76 of the world’s top early-career women in electrical engineering and computer science to explore life in academia.
Jacqueline Hewitt, Kristala Prather, and John Lienhard are among those recognized for their efforts to advance science.
“The human impact that I have is equally, if not more, important to me than the technical rigor of the work I’m doing,” says the senior.
Frankel MME ’60, SM ’60, an expert in ocean systems and economics, served on the faculty of MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and Sloan School of Management.
Stewart Isaacs, a PhD student in AeroAstro and a world champion jump roper, credits his academic successes to his long career in competitive jump roping.
The silent, lightweight aircraft doesn’t depend on fossil fuels.
Long-time EECS professor and Lincoln Laboratory division head is best known for research on transistors, lasers, and masers.