Researchers develop a new means of killing harmful bacteria
Engineered particles are capable of producing toxins that are deadly to targeted bacteria.
Engineered particles are capable of producing toxins that are deadly to targeted bacteria.
A nuclear power plant that will float eight or more miles out to sea promises to be safer, cheaper, and easier to deploy than today’s land-based plants.
Sports companies connect with engineering students and faculty at the second annual STE@M Day.
Study finds one-stop flights are a big contributor to global connectivity.
MIT students launch social enterprises that work with communities to foster financial and environmental sustainability.
Reinventing how these batteries are made also improves their performance and recyclability.
New ultralow-power circuit improves efficiency of energy harvesting to more than 80 percent.
PhD student Natasha Wright makes water safe to drink for rural, off-grid Indian villages.
Engineers from iRobot provide workshop for students from the Boston area in the MIT STEM Mentoring Program.
A witness to “a montage of environmental changes” in her native China, grad student Ruby Fu now studies the fate of methane bubbles in the ocean.
Technique enables production of pure, uniform coatings of metals or polymers, even on contoured surfaces.
Recent PhD recipient Rachel Zucker models phenomena collectively known as "dewetting" in microscale to nanoscale thin films.
Awards were given to outstanding faculty, and graduate, and undergraduate students.
PhD candidates Adam Kuang and Alex Creely are thriving after their first year at MIT's Plasma Science and Fusion Center.