James Keck, professor emeritus of mechanical engineering, dies at 86
Worked on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos
Worked on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos
Ability to recharge rapidly could make electric cars more acceptable to consumers, says MIT student team
Internationally respected journal honors work from Institute, Lincoln Laboratory
Among 150 students nationwide awarded fellowships in program's first year
Device from MIT lab could help diabetic patients monitor their blood glucose levels without finger pricks.
A Russian prison camp survivor, he worked at Lincoln Lab for 32 years and designed and built many laser systems still in use today.
Funding will support research on nano-engineered surfaces for heat management that could make all sorts of systems work more efficiently
Self-folding sheets of a plastic-like material point the way to robots that can assume any conceivable 3-D structure.
Material that shows melting while cooling might someday lead to applications in solar cells and other devices
A new way of analyzing grids of numbers known as matrices could improve signal-processing applications and data-compression schemes.
Among 21 granted fellowships this year
MIT outreach program uses America’s pastime to hook boys on math and physics
City planning, civil engineering graduates supported by MIT-Portugal Program talk about long-term connections to Portuguese students, faculty, stakeholders in transport
New technique holds promise to revert cells to an immature state that can develop into any cell type.
Understanding how electrons get excited is crucial to creating solar cells and light-emitting diodes