3 Questions: An anthropologist and a filmmaker on working-class lives in Chicago
A storytelling project by Christine Walley and Chris Boebel explores the social impacts of late 20th century deindustrialization.
A storytelling project by Christine Walley and Chris Boebel explores the social impacts of late 20th century deindustrialization.
Leonardo Bonanni MA ’03, SM ’05, PhD ’10 is founder and CEO of Sourcemap, an MIT Media Lab spinoff helping multinationals gain unprecedented insights into their supply chains.
New superconducting magnet breaks magnetic field strength records, paving the way for practical, commercial, carbon-free power.
FLC Excellence in Technology Transfer Award recognizes two innovations that have transitioned to commercial use.
To mitigate natural hazards equitably, PhD candidate Ipek Bensu Manav of the MIT CSHub is incorporating social vulnerability into resilience engineering and hazard recovery.
This year’s projects address mobile evaporative vegetable preservation, portable water filtration, and dairy waste reduction.
Public-private partnership aims to advance development and production of medical treatments.
Conference brings together educators, policymakers, and industry leaders to consider new education models to train skilled workers.
Eli Paster SM ’10, PhD '14 is the CEO of PolyJoule, a startup working to reinvent energy storage technology to increase efficiency and reduce costs.
As researchers consider materials for solid-state batteries, they also may want to consider how those materials could impact large-scale manufacturing.
Two research projects on the design of state-of-the-art hardware could one day power next-generation 5G and 6G mobile networks.
MIT spinoff Via Separations aims for industrial decarbonization with its durable graphene oxide membranes.
The 2021 School of Engineering Accenture Fellows are bolstering research and igniting ideas to help transform global business.
Originally developed at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, the technology allows organizations to ensure the security of sensitive data stored in the cloud.
A new study describes why, in the sector where emissions are hardest to cut, carbon capture could be the sharpest knife.