Q&A: Climate Grand Challenges finalists on building equity and fairness into climate solutions
Faculty leaders discuss the opportunities and obstacles in developing, scaling, and implementing their work rapidly.
Download RSS feed: News Articles / In the Media / Audio
Faculty leaders discuss the opportunities and obstacles in developing, scaling, and implementing their work rapidly.
Gordon Engineering Leadership Program revamps IAP course, with focus on building products and systems, working in diverse teams, testing to requirements, and competing for contracts and market share.
Theories from cognitive science and psychology could help humans learn to collaborate with robots faster and more effectively, scientists find.
Seventeen new professors join the MIT community, with research areas ranging from robotics and machine learning to health care and agriculture.
Experiments aboard International Space Station demonstrate a potential solution for cleaning up orbital debris and repairing damaged satellites.
Prestigious fellowship connects students with mentors and internships to help launch their careers in aerospace.
John L. "Jack" Swigert, Jr. Award for Space Exploration honors project team’s success harvesting a sample from asteroid Bennu.
New fellows are working on electronic health record algorithms, remote sensing data related to environmental health, and neural networks for the development of antibiotics.
Gilda Barabino, president of Olin College of Engineering and professor of biomedical and chemical engineering, inaugurates the new series.
Researchers develop a way to test whether popular methods for understanding machine-learning models are working correctly.
Seniors David Darrow and Tara Venkatadri and HST student James Diao will pursue master’s programs at Cambridge University.
A new course teaches students how to use computational techniques to solve real-world problems, from landing a spacecraft to placing cell phone towers.
The 2021-22 Accenture Fellows are bolstering research and igniting ideas to help transform global business.
A levitating vehicle might someday explore the moon, asteroids, and other airless planetary surfaces.
A new study shows it’s theoretically possible. The hypothesis could be tested soon with proposed Venus-bound missions.