Responsive design meets responsibility for the planet’s future
Senior Sylas Horowitz tackles engineering projects with a focus on challenges related to clean energy, climate justice, and sustainable development.
Senior Sylas Horowitz tackles engineering projects with a focus on challenges related to clean energy, climate justice, and sustainable development.
Seven researchers, along with 14 additional MIT alumni, are honored for significant contributions to engineering research, practice, and education.
The sensor sends out its location as it moves through the GI tract, revealing where slowdowns in digestion may occur.
Recent alumnus James Hermus wants to help others overcome barriers to accessibility and full participation.
PhD students Lucy Du ’14, SM ’16 and Ginger Schmidt are crushing the competition — and gender barriers — in the world of televised robot combat.
New IAP course opens doors to language learning, as well as cultural education and war relief.
The associate professor of MechE reflects on how his company, Kytopen, has grown and shifted focus in developing safer immunotherapies.
With a grant from the Office of Naval Research, MIT researchers aim to design novel high-performance steels, with potential applications including printed aircraft components and ship hulls.
Stacking light-emitting diodes instead of placing them side by side could enable fully immersive virtual reality displays and higher-resolution digital screens.
A new computational framework could help researchers design granular hydrogels to repair or replace diseased tissues.
Companies founded by MechE faculty and alumni solve a variety of health care challenges, from better drug delivery to robotic surgery.
Faculty members recognized for excellence via a diverse array of honors, grants, and prizes.
Over 47 years at MIT, “Leslie made every one of us feel like family,” says NASA astronaut Mike Massimino SM ’88, PhD ’92.
A method for quickly predicting the forces needed to push objects through "flowable media" could help engineers drive robots or anchor ships.
Their technique could allow chip manufacturers to produce next-generation transistors based on materials other than silicon.