Four researchers earn interdisciplinary Schmidt Science Fellowships
Selective global honor supports early-career scientists and engineers in taking on new pursuits.
Selective global honor supports early-career scientists and engineers in taking on new pursuits.
Faculty members recognized for excellence via a diverse array of honors, grants, and prizes.
The results open possibilities for studying gravity’s effects on relatively large objects in quantum states.
Professor Laurie Boyer studies cardiac development, and how we might be able to mend broken hearts.
MIT engineers used kirigami-style etching to design a stent that can temporarily lodge in tubular organs to release drugs.
With thousands of satellites, each network could beam down tens of terabits per second, filling gaps left by land-based services.
Ranked at the top for the 10th straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
Ten principal investigators from seven MIT departments and labs will receive up to $150,000 for two years, overhead-free, for innovative research on global food and water challenges.
Professor Nicholas Fang’s startup Boston Micro Fabrication uses a novel light-focusing method to make ultraprecise printers.
By selectively heating specific phonons without heating the entire material, researchers have enhanced ion diffusion in a way that could have broad applications.
MIT students lead first-ever Global Teaching Labs workshop in Sudan.
Alumni-founded Multiply Labs uses an automated manufacturing platform to produce advanced treatments at scale.
System Design and Management's industry and certificate director is honored for his work in Covid-19 response.
J-WAFS-supported researchers employ a mechanical approach to more efficiently clean membranes used for desalination.
Fellowship funds graduate studies at Stanford University.