Not your average science classroom
MIT student volunteers host fifth annual Northeast Regional Middle School Science Bowl for over 100 middle schoolers.
MIT student volunteers host fifth annual Northeast Regional Middle School Science Bowl for over 100 middle schoolers.
Institute ranks second in five subject areas.
The award is given annually by the American Chemical Society.
Participating MIT students make history by taking all top five spots — the first time this has happened for any school.
MLK Visiting Scholar Benjamin McDonald uses synthetic organic chemistry in the Swager lab to answer questions with more questions.
A new study may explain why people with autism are often highly sensitive to light and noise.
Through on-site projects in developing countries and internships in the business world, Kendyll Hicks explores the political and economic drivers of global health.
Technique may help scientists more accurately map vast underground geologic structures.
Highly regarded physicist was well-known for studying plasma turbulence in terms of coherent structures.
MIT students train teams in Ghana and Uganda for the International Mathematical Olympiad through MISTI-Africa.
New members have made advances in computer architecture, network coding, ocean engineering, higher education, and quantum computation.
Study identifies a transition in the strong nuclear force that illuminates the structure of a neutron star’s core.
Method with polarized light can create and measure nonsymmetrical states in a layered material.
Building devices to study fusion at the new (and highly controlled) “MIT Nucleus” makerspace generates enthusiasm — and a purple glow.
Matt Shoulders hopes to shed light on diseases linked to flawed protein folding.