Two from MIT honored at World Technology Awards
PhD candidate Maher Damak and Professor Moungi Bawendi recognized for advances in engineering and chemistry.
PhD candidate Maher Damak and Professor Moungi Bawendi recognized for advances in engineering and chemistry.
Working group is responsible for helping MIT to respond proactively to any changes that could limit students' access to MIT or their ability to thrive at the Institute.
MIT Professor Daniela Rus combines automation and mobility to create a smarter world.
MIT engineer’s research on surfaces is improving everything from power plants to ketchup bottles.
CRISPR pioneer named to inaugural chair created by Patricia and James Poitras '63, founders of MIT’s Poitras Center for Affective Disorders Research.
Professor James Fujimoto, Eric Swanson SM '84, and collaborators lauded for optical coherence tomography.
Professor Barbara Imperiali creates better biochemical tools for basic biology and drug development.
Longtime Nuclear Research Lab director made advances in nuclear and condensed-matter physics, nuclear materials, reactor technology, and nuclear medicine.
Research shows how rebuilding Britain’s Houses of Parliament in the 1800s helped create clean-air laws.
Nuclear scientist Michael Short aims to understand the full range of defects produced when materials are exposed to radiation.
Students, faculty, staff, and alumni honored in "the most definitive gathering of today’s leading young change-makers and innovators."
Five Lincoln Laboratory staff members and two others from MIT honored for the advancement of engineering, science, and technology.
Chemist Elizabeth Nolan studies the battle between microbes and hosts for essential metals.
The former MIT Media Lab faculty member explored the intersections of play, learning, design, and technology.
Grants totaling $21,450 were awarded to seven proposals in MindHandHeart’s fourth funding cycle.