Making her move
MIT senior overcame disabilities to study materials science, hoping to pave the way for other aspiring engineers.
MIT senior overcame disabilities to study materials science, hoping to pave the way for other aspiring engineers.
Clever math could enable a high-quality 3-D camera so simple, cheap and power-efficient that it could be incorporated into handheld devices.
Three-year study produces proposals for boosting energy innovation to meet growing demand, curb global warming.
Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering professor emeritus honored by Fusion Power Associates.
Initiative expected to focus on six broad environmental research themes.
Site’s U.S. growth relied primarily on media attention, geographic proximity of users.
Project Angstrom selected by magazine's editors; featured in December issue
Exhaustive reference system and interactive toolkit could revolutionize materials research, potentially enabling new types of manufacturing.
Model of flu proteins suggests new way to design vaccines that slow mutations.
A new technique for finding relationships between variables in large datasets makes no prior assumptions about what those relationships might be.
One MIT senior traveled the planet’s most remote areas before landing at the Institute, where he now works on engineering better thermoelectric devices.
New advance could lead to even smaller features in the constant quest for more compact, faster microchips.
By using optical equipment in a totally unexpected way, MIT researchers have created an imaging system that makes light look slow.