Nature’s tiny engineers
Coral organisms use minuscule appendages to control their environment, stirring up water eddies to bring nutrients.
Coral organisms use minuscule appendages to control their environment, stirring up water eddies to bring nutrients.
Using magnetic fields, technique can detect parasite’s waste products in infected blood cells.
Interfaces within materials can be patterned as a means of controlling the properties of composites.
Bilge Yildiz explores the dynamics of surfaces to design more resilient materials for applications in high-intensity environments.
Students’ designs for cellular-networking protocols help define the limits of protocol performance.
Acoustic device that separates tumor cells from blood cells could help assess cancer’s spread.
Savings from healthier air can make up for some or all of the cost of carbon-reduction policies.
CSAIL study finds that human subjects prefer when robots give the orders.
New algorithm lets drones monitor their own health during long package-delivery missions.
Novel software by Akselos drastically increases speed, ease of 3-D engineering simulations.
Silvija Gradečak customizes nanoscale systems for large-scale impact in light and energy.
MIT study investigates power generation from the meeting of river water and seawater.
Rob Miller, computer science professor, to serve in undergraduate residence.
Adib and Shah to be honored at EmTech@MIT conference next month
PhD student Niaja Farve combines research, entrepreneurship, outreach, and indefatigable drive.