From security to systems: J-WAFS name change reflects its breadth and impact
Emphasizing the scope and interdisciplinary mission on which it was founded, J-WAFS has a new name: the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab.
Emphasizing the scope and interdisciplinary mission on which it was founded, J-WAFS has a new name: the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab.
Solutions grants will aid commercialization of novel MIT technologies to test water safety and improve agricultural productivity.
Historian, curator, and designer studies architects and their quest to make a better world.
Architect and planner remembered as a man who brought people together through a combination of wisdom, optimism, and charm.
What if we could immerse ourselves in this UNESCO World Heritage Site through virtual reality or use augmented reality to interact with its 3-D site map?
By making hydrophobic sections water-soluble, researchers hope to learn more about protein structures.
Interdisciplinary work will advance research in human and machine intelligence.
In a novel system developed by MIT researchers, underwater sonar signals cause vibrations that can be decoded by an airborne receiver.
Corporations and nonprofits are applying the popular MIT online tool to shape policy and set wages.
Technique can capture a scene at multiple depths with one shutter click — no zoom lens needed.
Machine-learning system determines the fewest, smallest doses that could still shrink brain tumors.
Graduate students receive J-WAFS fellowships to support research focused on improving water access for rural as well as urban communities.
MIT class designs a prototype building to demonstrate that even huge buildings can be built primarily with wood.
Iconic composer A. R. Rahman visits MIT campus to learn more about new technologies.