School of Engineering awards for 2017
Awards given to outstanding faculty, undergraduates, and graduate students.
Awards given to outstanding faculty, undergraduates, and graduate students.
Biophysicist Ibrahim Cissé and cell biologist Gene-Wei Li honored as Pew Scholars; postdocs Ana Fiszbein and María Inda are named Pew Latin American Fellows.
Following their MIT studies, graduates in MIT’s Reserve Officer Training Corps set off on new challenges in the U.S. military.
Neural networks could be implemented more quickly using new photonic technology.
Former Laboratory for Nuclear Science and Center for Theoretical Physics director made important contributions to the study of nuclear structure and reactions.
Nearly 3 billion light years from Earth, the black holes are the farthest ever detected.
Exotic metal displays behavior that could lead to new infrared detectors.
Platform may be used to explore avenues for quantum computing.
Bell, Bhatia, Cummins, Duflo, Jensen, and Mavalvala honored for research achievements.
Some 40 light-years away, "super-Earth" identified as new target for atmospheric study.
MIT senior will pursue theoretical physics studies as a Marshall Scholar.
Fellowship funds graduate school studies for exceptional immigrants and children of immigrants.
Longtime Department of Physics professor assisted in nuclear bomb projects in England and Los Alamos, and was a leader in physics education.
Prestigious honor society announces 228 new members this year.