Q&A: Climate Grand Challenges finalists on new pathways to decarbonizing industry
Faculty leaders detail promising technologies, materials, and methods that could help unlock a low-carbon future in sectors where emissions are hardest to cut.
Faculty leaders detail promising technologies, materials, and methods that could help unlock a low-carbon future in sectors where emissions are hardest to cut.
Senior Isha Mehrotra works to discover more about autoimmune diseases, aiming for a future in which patients can be treated effectively or avoid the conditions altogether.
Named after a goddess of the dawn, the Thesan simulation of the first billion years helps explain how radiation shaped the early universe.
These cells, located in the brain’s striatum, appear to help with decision-making that requires evaluating risks and benefits.
Martin Luther King Jr. Scholar bridges disciplines to translate vision into elegant math and neuroscience theory.
The MIT biologist’s research has shed light on the immortality of germline cells and the function of “junk DNA.”
Zoe Fisher's undergraduate research journey leads to a role working on the SPARC tokamak.
Virtual conference gathered students, faculty, and industry partners to explore the future of microsystems and nanotechnology.
Postdoc Digbijay Mahat became a cancer researcher to improve health care in Nepal, but the Covid-19 pandemic exposed additional resource disparities.
When it comes to carbon storage, some MIT scientists think the best solution is to find the fastest way to turn carbon into rock.
The discovery could help researchers engineer exotic electrical states such as unconventional superconductivity.
Faculty leaders describe their efforts to develop potentially game-changing tools.
Professor describes a new research center he is working to develop where researchers will seek to improve patient care by integrating neuroscience and anesthesiology.
Inspired by the human ear, a new acoustic fabric converts audible sounds into electrical signals.
Among thousands of known exoplanets, MIT astronomers flag three that are actually stars.