School of Engineering Awards for 2022
The MIT School of Engineering recently honored outstanding faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students with its 2022 awards.
The MIT School of Engineering recently honored outstanding faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students with its 2022 awards.
International award supports early-career scientists and engineers as they pursue interdisciplinary works.
Longtime MIT researcher and former associate director of the Plasma Science and Fusion Center contributed to fusion energy progress on campus and around the world.
Professor of electrical engineering and computer science will receive additional support to advance his research and career.
This family of crystalline compounds is at the forefront of research seeking alternatives to silicon.
Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors and Scholars will enhance and enrich the MIT community through engagement with students and faculty.
With FabO, PhD student Dishita Turakhia wants to empower students to learn digital fabrication by making video game objects and characters come alive.
Researchers have made strides toward machine-learning models that can help doctors more efficiently find information in a patient’s health record.
With particles that release their payloads at different times, one injection could provide multiple vaccine doses.
The School of Engineering honors the associate professor of nuclear science and engineering for his experiential approach to teaching.
Program supports family caregivers with dedicated service coordinators based on learning from MIT's AgeLab.
A geometric deep-learning model is faster and more accurate than state-of-the-art computational models, reducing the chances and costs of drug trial failures.
Systems used in many industries could save energy through these new surface treatments.
Recent doctoral graduates from MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering reflect on how they overcame challenges during their time as graduate students.
Failing to consider neighborhood texture in hurricane-related wind loss models may undervalue stronger construction by over 80 percent.