Bradford Parkinson SM ’61 awarded Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering
“Father of GPS” honored with three colleagues for creating the first truly global, satellite-based positioning system.
“Father of GPS” honored with three colleagues for creating the first truly global, satellite-based positioning system.
Study suggests noninvasive spectroscopy could be used to monitor blood glucose levels.
Assistant Professor Sili Deng is on a quest to understand the chemistry involved in combustion and develop strategies to make it cleaner.
Computer scientists’ new method could help doctors avoid ineffective or unnecessarily risky treatments.
Model tags road features based on satellite images, to improve GPS navigation in places with limited map data.
Chari, Hoburg, and Moghbeli, all with ties to the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, among the first class to graduate under agency’s Artemis program.
MIT researchers review renewable energy and carbon pricing policies as states consider repealing or relaxing renewable portfolio standards.
Student committee puts together research showcase while balancing coursework, qualifying exams, and extracurriculars.
New light-sensitive material could eliminate some of the endoscopic procedures needed to remove gastrointestinal devices.
Students in class 2.S999 (Solving for Carbon Neutrality at MIT) are charged with developing plans to make MIT’s campus carbon neutral by 2060.
A campaign to spread notes of kindness is coming to MIT, inspired by alumni Nick Demas and Jerry Wang.
Wielding complex algorithms, nuclear science and engineering doctoral candidate Nestor Sepulveda spins out scenarios for combating climate change.
A new method determines whether circuits are accurately executing complex operations that classical computers can’t tackle.
Carbon nanotube film produces aerospace-grade composites with no need for huge ovens or autoclaves.
Associate Professor Yury Polyanskiy is working to keep data flowing as the “internet of things” becomes a reality.