Astronomers discover a rare “black widow” binary, with the shortest orbit yet
The system is orbited by third stellar companion and may have originated near the center of the Milky Way.
The system is orbited by third stellar companion and may have originated near the center of the Milky Way.
The 2nd Annual Research Slam featured three-minute talks on cutting-edge research from across MIT in an engaging public showcase and competition.
The findings will help scientists trace a black hole’s evolution as it feeds on stellar material.
A new approach could make it possible to detect the elusive Unruh effect in hours, rather than billions of years.
An art-science collaboration tests the limits of visual technologies.
A novel photolithography technique could be a manufacturing game-changer for optical applications.
Seven staff members are recognized for their dedication to the School of Science and to MIT.
A multidisciplinary team of graduate students helps infuse ethical computing content into MIT’s largest machine learning course.
Study finds genome loops don’t last long in cells; theories of how loops control gene expression may need to be revised.
After four decades at the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, Deputy Director Martin Greenwald embodies a brief history of fusion at MIT.
The Institute also ranks second in two subject areas.
Graduate engineering, economics, and various science programs are No. 1 in the nation; MIT Sloan is No. 5.
Named after a goddess of the dawn, the Thesan simulation of the first billion years helps explain how radiation shaped the early universe.
Virtual conference gathered students, faculty, and industry partners to explore the future of microsystems and nanotechnology.
The discovery could help researchers engineer exotic electrical states such as unconventional superconductivity.