Researchers design sensors to rapidly detect plant hormones
SMART nanosensors are safer and less tedious than existing techniques for testing plants’ response to compounds such as herbicides.
SMART nanosensors are safer and less tedious than existing techniques for testing plants’ response to compounds such as herbicides.
How-to manual from MIT and the Fashion Institute of Technology codifies successful textiles partnership between designers, engineers.
New superconducting magnet breaks magnetic field strength records, paving the way for practical, commercial, carbon-free power.
Conference brings together educators, policymakers, and industry leaders to consider new education models to train skilled workers.
After nearly a decade, an interdisciplinary collaboration to model a 3D spider web leads to many surprising results.
Using an untapped resource, the Malden River Project is boosting social resilience along with climate mitigation in the gateway city of Malden, Massachusetts.
Two research projects on the design of state-of-the-art hardware could one day power next-generation 5G and 6G mobile networks.
The 2021 School of Engineering Accenture Fellows are bolstering research and igniting ideas to help transform global business.
A student-run project is collecting messages from around the world, using nanotechnology to etch them on a disk, and sending the disk to the International Space Station.
Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs discusses the state’s plans to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050 and how to get there.
SAMCO inductively coupled plasma etcher can process multiple materials at various sizes.
An optimization tool from the Department of Air Force–MIT AI Accelerator is transforming the laborious process of staffing C-17 cargo flights.
MISTI Global Seed Funds program compounds Institute impact by supporting partnerships abroad.
Graduate student Ellen Zhong helped biologists and mathematicians reach across departmental lines to address a longstanding problem in electron microscopy.
Nearly 300 government and military members participated in a new course designed to explore the next generation of artificial intelligence and related technologies.