Albert Meyer named EECS Undergraduate Officer
Succeeds Dennis M. Freeman, who was recently selected as the MIT Dean for Undergraduate Education
Succeeds Dennis M. Freeman, who was recently selected as the MIT Dean for Undergraduate Education
Understanding the properties that control surface dissipation of heat could lead to improved power plants and electronics with high heat-transfer rates.
Better understanding of how surfaces attract or repel water could improve everything from power plants to ketchup bottles.
Entrepreneur served on faculty for 45 years; championed long-term corporate research.
Systems that can convert written specifications into working code in a few narrow cases could be generalized to other tasks.
Associate Professor Jesse Kroll and his lab join major study of atmosphere in the southeastern United States
Marine microbes change swimming direction via a high-speed mechanical instability.
Professor cited for contributions to fusion energy development and the physics of plasma waves
Awards given to outstanding faculty, graduate and undergraduate students.
Tomás Palacios investigates use of ‘extreme materials’ in electronics, which could reduce energy consumption and make computers far faster.
New research enables high-speed customization of novel nanoparticles for drug delivery and other uses.
A new hardware design makes data encryption more secure by disguising cloud servers’ memory-access patterns.