A better way to deliver innovation to the world
"To tackle our biggest societal challenges, we need an innovation pipeline that delivers every drop," Reif writes.
"To tackle our biggest societal challenges, we need an innovation pipeline that delivers every drop," Reif writes.
Chancellor Cynthia Barnhart thanks SuperUROP students for their research and innovation contributions; praises program's quintessential "MIT-ness."
Microfluidic cell-squeezing device opens new possibilities for cell-based vaccines.
Edward Boyden develops techniques to study the brain, and how it operates, in finer detail.
In visit to MIT, NASA astronaut Yvonne Cagle urges women and girls to dream big.
Civil and environmental engineering TREX students present their findings on Hawaii’s Mt. Kilauea to Boston Museum of Science educators.
Professor J. Kim Vandiver uses 3-D printing to help in explosives disposal in Cambodia.
Funds support MIT's global engagement by promoting collaborations between MIT faculty and their counterparts abroad.
“Visual microphone” technology could lead to noninvasive identification of objects’ structural defects.
New manufacturing process could take exotic material out of the lab and into commercial products.
MIT students organize a new group aimed at building a network of peers in electrical engineering.
Nuclear science and engineering graduate student Benjamin Magolan helps model improved coolant flow inside the core of a nuclear reactor.
Algorithm reduces size of data sets while preserving their mathematical properties.
Researchers find a way of tuning light waves by pairing two exotic 2-D materials.