Veteran engineer studies career pathways of today’s graduates
After a mid-career jump to academia, PhD student Jim Magarian now analyzes engineering workforce issues.
After a mid-career jump to academia, PhD student Jim Magarian now analyzes engineering workforce issues.
At Plume Labs in Paris, MIT-France interns take on an invisible threat by helping to develop a wearable device that tracks indoor and outdoor air quality.
Paper-based diagnostic avoids false positives from Dengue fever and other related viruses.
Members of AeroAstro and MechE are returning to a dramatically renovated building, with robots, drones, and even a Corvette in tow.
Method may help predict hotspots of instability affecting climate, aircraft performance, and ocean circulation.
MIT researchers supported by J-WAFS present results of their work on food and water security.
Unusual fluorescent materials could be used for rapid light-based communications systems.
MIT study reveals a new way to enhance or reduce the adhesion of freezing droplets.
From heart rates to exploding pumpkins, the topics students can explore for the Go Forth and Measure project are virtually unlimited.
Three new projects and two renewals receive J-WAFS Solutions grant funding for 2017-2018.
Mechanical engineering alumna and internationally recognized professor is the new associate head of the department.
Carbon nanotubes lower the transformation temperature of glassy carbon, possibly aiding manufacturers, MIT researchers report.
In study that may guide drug design, researchers find organelles encounter varying levels of resistance.
Engineers predict how flowing fluid will bend tiny hairs that line blood vessels and intestines.
Study explains conflicting results from other experiments, may lead to batteries with more energy per pound.