How generative AI can help scientists synthesize complex materials
MIT researchers’ DiffSyn model offers recipes for synthesizing new materials, enabling faster experimentation and a shorter journey from hypothesis to use.
MIT researchers’ DiffSyn model offers recipes for synthesizing new materials, enabling faster experimentation and a shorter journey from hypothesis to use.
The new system could be used at home or in doctors’ offices to scan people who are at high risk for breast cancer.
By leveraging excess heat instead of electricity, microscopic silicon structures could enable more energy-efficient thermal sensing and signal processing.
MIT physicists observed the first clear evidence that quarks create a wake as they speed through quark-gluon plasma, confirming the plasma behaves like a liquid.
Researchers uncover a hidden mechanism that allows cancer to develop aggressive mutations.
New “biomimetic” model of brain circuits and function at multiple scales produced naturalistic dynamics and learning, and even identified curious behavior by some neurons.
New research detects hidden evidence of mistaken correlations — and provides a method to improve accuracy.
MIT researchers tested their theory of spatial computing, which holds that the brain recruits and controls ad hoc groups of neurons for cognitive tasks by applying brain waves to patches of the cortex.
“MorphoChrome,” developed at MIT, pairs software with a handheld device to make everyday objects iridescent.
New research may explain the striking differences between the two planets’ polar vortex patterns.
Delia Wendel’s new book illuminates a painful and painstaking effort by citizens to bear witness to atrocities.
New technique could improve the scalability of trapped-ion quantum computers, an essential step toward making them practically useful.
With support from the Siegel Family Endowment, the newly renamed MIT Siegel Family Quest for Intelligence investigates how brains produce intelligence and how it can be replicated to solve problems.
Learning more about this structure could help scientists find ways to block Tau from forming tangles in the brain of Alzheimer’s patients.
The protein, known as intelectin-2, also helps to strengthen the mucus barrier lining the digestive tract.