MIT researchers create new form of matter
Supersolid is crystalline and superfluid at the same time.
Supersolid is crystalline and superfluid at the same time.
Three-in-one design allows genetic, chemical, optical, and electrical inputs and outputs.
Study: Silicon can reproduce physical phenomena exploited by high-end telecommunications devices.
Technique could provide unique views of single molecules that conventional methods can’t match.
Professor James Fujimoto, Eric Swanson SM '84, and collaborators lauded for optical coherence tomography.
New atom interferometer could measure inertial forces with record-setting accuracy.
Professor emeritus of electrical engineering recognized for contributions to field of nanofabrication.
Four proposals from six MIT faculty members to receive Professor Amar G. Bose Research Grants.
Low-power tabletop source of ultrashort electron beams could replace car-size laboratory devices.
Green, Ketterle, Nedivi, and Shrobe are among those recognized for their efforts toward advancing science.
Technique may enable large-scale atom arrays for quantum computing.
James Kirtley discusses the transition from gas to electric motors and the impact these motors have had on modern technologies.
Keyboard-monitoring technique can detect motor difficulties as patients type.
Observations of atomic interactions could help pave way to room-temperature superconductors.
Engineers program human cells to store complex histories in their DNA.