Electrons become fractions of themselves in graphene, study finds
An exotic electronic state observed by MIT physicists could enable more robust forms of quantum computing.
An exotic electronic state observed by MIT physicists could enable more robust forms of quantum computing.
Political science and physics major Leela Fredlund wants to ensure fairness and justice prevail in humanity's leap into space.
The results will expand scientists’ understanding of heat flow in superconductors and neutron stars.
The finding provides new insights into the ultrafast control of magnetic materials, with potential to enable next-generation information processing technologies.
The advanced fabrication tools will enable the next generation of microelectronics and microsystems while bridging the gap from the lab to commercialization.
The detections more than double the number of known tidal disruption events in the nearby universe.
The findings suggest our galaxy’s core may contain less dark matter than previously estimated.
Using New York as a test case, the model predicts flooding at the level experienced during Hurricane Sandy will occur roughly every 30 years by the end of this century.
MIT researchers propose “PEDS” method for developing models of complex physical systems in mechanics, optics, thermal transport, fluid dynamics, physical chemistry, climate, and more.
Senior and physics major Gosha Geogdzhayev devotes himself to climate modeling and writing poetry.
Assistant professor of physics honored for work on the development of laser spectroscopy techniques to investigate the properties of subatomic particles.
In a study that could help fill some holes in quantum theory, the team recreated a “quantum bomb tester” in a classical droplet test.
MIT Digital Learning Lab and Empowr pilot a new internship program.
More stable clocks could measure quantum phenomena, including the presence of dark matter.
Cosmologist and MLK Scholar Morgane König uses gravitational waves to study the universe’s origins, inflation, and present trajectory.