Institute Archives spotlights pioneering women at MIT
Initiative is building collections highlighting the contributions of female faculty.
Initiative is building collections highlighting the contributions of female faculty.
Physics alumnus who saw the Hindenburg fly over campus now collaborates with researchers to explore the impacts of longevity.
Historic building would create “design hub” for MIT, with benefits for surrounding community.
In a tradition that started nearly 50 years ago, Baker House residents drop a donated, nonworking, and irreparable piano off the roof to mark “Drop Day.”
MIT Community Dialogue series is underway as multi-year research continues.
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences honors trailblazing professors Jule Charney and Edward Lorenz with a tribute to their lives and legacies.
Symposium explores how novel ideas and experiments are advancing many areas of theoretical physics in newly interconnected ways.
Students bring the Institute into national conversation about universities and the institution of slavery in the United States.
The collection features groundbreaking projects from pioneers working at the intersection of art, science, and technology.
Digital archive features never-before-published image of MIT's first black woman student.
Findings show founder William Barton Rogers possessed enslaved persons before coming to MIT; research, community dialogue to ensue.
MIT’s historic graphite exponential pile has been restored as a tool for education and research.
Memorial tribute celebrates former Institute president who cherished “This special place.”
Symposium commemorates the life and career of pioneering professor and beloved mentor Mildred Dresselhaus.
Largest, most advanced U.S. academic tunnel will replace 79-year-old facility; Boeing is project’s lead donor with philanthropic commitment.