New England renewables + Canadian hydropower
Power flowing both ways across the border offers a pathway to clean electricity in 2050.
Power flowing both ways across the border offers a pathway to clean electricity in 2050.
After four decades at the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, Deputy Director Martin Greenwald embodies a brief history of fusion at MIT.
MIT biological engineers have developed a simple way to identify B or T cells that interact with viral or bacterial proteins.
From nuclear proliferation to climate change, Richard K. Lester taps research talent to map a path toward a sustainable planet.
The fellowship supports research contributing to the field of planetary science and astronomy.
Faculty leaders highlight innovations that can close longstanding knowledge gaps and reimagine how the world responds to the climate crisis.
A new technique compares the reasoning of a machine-learning model to that of a human, so the user can see patterns in the model’s behavior.
MIT scientists hope to deploy a fleet of drones to get a better sense of how much carbon the ocean is absorbing, and how much more it can take.
MIT researchers design a robot that has a trick or two up its sleeve.
A new analysis shows how milk-producing cells change over time in nursing mothers.
For individuals who communicate using a single switch, a new interface learns how they make selections, and then self-adjusts accordingly.
Why has it taken the scientific community so long to include sex as a biological variable in research and analysis as a matter of course?
Yogesh Surendranath and his team are bringing powerful techniques of electrochemistry to bear on the problem of designing catalysts for sustainable fuels.
Electric fields may represent information held in working memory, allowing the brain to overcome “representational drift,” or the inconsistent participation of individual neurons.
An efficient machine-learning method uses chemical knowledge to create a learnable grammar with production rules to build synthesizable monomers and polymers.