Portable technology offers boost for nuclear security, arms control
MIT team devises compact, affordable system for identifying elemental composition of nuclear and other materials.
MIT team devises compact, affordable system for identifying elemental composition of nuclear and other materials.
A technique for labeling and retrieving DNA data files from a large pool could help make DNA data storage feasible.
With thousands of satellites, each network could beam down tens of terabits per second, filling gaps left by land-based services.
A virtual environment embedded with knowledge of the physical world speeds up problem-solving.
Natasha Joglekar ’21 is eager to apply her MIT education, with a major in computer science and biology and a minor in women’s and gender studies, to a career in medical research.
Observations quadruple the number of known radio bursts and reveal two types: one-offs and repeaters.
Ranked at the top for the 10th straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
Assistant professor Connor Coley is developing tools that would be able to predict molecular behavior and learn from both successes and mistakes.
Ten principal investigators from seven MIT departments and labs will receive up to $150,000 for two years, overhead-free, for innovative research on global food and water challenges.
MIT instructors honored for creating multidimensional, multidisciplinary online courses that help learners everywhere address real-world problems.
Chemical engineers have found a way to load more drug into a tablet, which could then be made smaller and easier to swallow.
Imaging technique could enable new pathways for reducing concrete’s hefty carbon footprint, as well as for 3-D printing of concrete.
A new material made from carbon nanotubes can generate electricity by scavenging energy from its environment.
At Picower Institute symposium, speakers describe harms of early exposure to trauma, racism, as well as the restorative power of understanding, nurturing, and extending opportunity.
For Gabrielle Finear, a senior studying computer science, working on two startup ideas in MIT Sandbox provided hands-on learning to complement her coursework.