Going with the flow
Ken Kamrin’s model of granular material flow could impact how we interact with sand, soil, pills, industrial materials, and more.
Ken Kamrin’s model of granular material flow could impact how we interact with sand, soil, pills, industrial materials, and more.
Choices by consumers and farmers can help limit global warming, but climate change may also curtail those choices in the future.
Seven award-winning faculty members represent three departments in the School of Engineering.
New principled approach helps autonomous underwater vehicles explore the ocean in an intelligent, energy-efficient manner.
MIT Statistics and Data Science Conference highlights new approaches and varied applications.
Education Innovation Grant program for pK-12 and higher education awards $400,000 to MIT faculty to support education innovation both at MIT and globally.
Cryptographic system could enable “crowdsourced” genomics, with volunteers contributing information to privacy-protected databases.
Today’s autonomous vehicles require hand-labeled 3-D maps, but CSAIL’s MapLite system enables navigation with just GPS and sensors.
International workshop proposes future directions for long-standing conflict.
Over 700 students and makers joined in the first annual participatory showcase of fabrication and crafts around the Institute.
Students are flocking to 6.00 (Introduction to Computer Science and Programming Using Python), where they learn not just coding but computational thinking.
Professor Sara Seager previews a new era of discovery as a leader of the TESS mission, which is expected to find some 20,000 extrasolar planets.
Fellowships last for up to three years, covering full tuition and mandatory fees.