3Q: Muriel Médard on the world-altering rise of 5G
“The reason 5G is so different is that what exactly it will look like is still up in the air. Everyone agrees the phrase is a bit of a catch-all.”
“The reason 5G is so different is that what exactly it will look like is still up in the air. Everyone agrees the phrase is a bit of a catch-all.”
Graduate students receive J-WAFS fellowships to support research focused on improving water access for rural as well as urban communities.
Researchers incorporate optoelectronic diodes into fibers and weave them into washable fabrics.
CSAIL system encourages government transparency using cryptography on a public log of wiretap requests.
Hydrogen peroxide-sensing molecule reveals whether chemotherapy drugs are having their intended effects.
With new method, surgeons would remove tumor, then implant microparticles that attack remaining cancer cells.
The Samuel W. Ing Memorial Fund will support MIT graduate students as they create a more advanced and less costly path to fusion energy solutions.
NAVAIR is upgrading its acquisition capabilities using an MIT online course in model-based systems engineering.
Through the Ibn Khaldun Fellowship for Saudi Arabian Women, postdoctoral scientists and engineers develop their professional skills during a one-year stay at MIT.
Iconic composer A. R. Rahman visits MIT campus to learn more about new technologies.
Professor of electrical engineering and computer science is honored for his contributions to theoretical computer science.
Using freeze-dried, shelf-stable cellular components, students can learn about key biological concepts.
Silicon-based system offers smaller, cheaper alternative to other “broadband” filters; could improve a variety of photonic devices.
Advanced Functional Fabrics of America workshop challenges pioneering MIT and FIT students to conceive new ideas.
PhD student Richard Fineman is using wearable sensors to understand coordination and walking — and next-generation spacesuit design.