Our hairy insides
Engineers predict how flowing fluid will bend tiny hairs that line blood vessels and intestines.
Engineers predict how flowing fluid will bend tiny hairs that line blood vessels and intestines.
Study explains conflicting results from other experiments, may lead to batteries with more energy per pound.
Shotokan karate provides MIT community members with a unique artistic outlet.
Grantees will spend the 2017-2018 academic year conducting research abroad.
Startup is meeting global environmental needs by changing the way power plants use water.
Startup’s gas-electric engines may pave way for package delivery and human flight.
Researchers gauge a cell’s stiffness, which can reflect cancer or other conditions, simply by watching it.
Mechanical engineering professor will help guide educational initiatives and strategy.
Women make up 49.5 percent of MIT’s undergraduates in mechanical engineering, due to department’s proactive approach, study finds.
MIT emeritus professor, designer, and inventor, is set to release the fourth edition of his popular book, "Bicycling Science," known as the "bike bible."
Results may help surgeons determine when and how to treat heart attacks.
Bonded layers of rubber and hydrogel yield tough, slippery, and impermeable coatings.
Robot can inspect water or gas pipes from the inside to find leaks long before they become catastrophic.
MIT 3-Sigma Sports links students and researchers with industry partners to solve the greatest engineering problems in sports.
Alumni aim to make outdoor sports safer through gathering data and building a real-time social network.