News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 2310 of 3026 results Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Nov 8, 2012 Faculty member James N. Butler passes away at 78 Appointed as Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Chemistry, he taught at Harvard for 30 years; Memorial service will be held on November 10 Environment, Nov 6, 2012 Counting votes, in the precinct and on the Web How computational scientists are rethinking U.S. elections—and making e-commerce smarter Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, AI / Machine Learning, Oct 31, 2012 Assembly not required Researchers from NYU, Harvard, and Dow Chemical create new microparticles that self-assemble like atoms into molecules Materials, Applied Physics, Oct 31, 2012 Paths to success HGWISE Mentoring Program recognizes the impact of a great role model (GSAS News) Electrical Engineering, Diversity / Inclusion, Applied Physics, Oct 21, 2012 Targeting solar geoengineering to minimize risk and inequality New study suggests that solar geoengineering can be tailored to reduce inequality or to manage specific risks like the loss of Arctic sea ice Environment, Climate, Applied Physics, Oct 16, 2012 Jelly-like atmospheric particles resist chemical aging Findings will affect scientific models of cloud formation and light absorption Environment, Climate, Oct 16, 2012 An Arctic mercury meltdown Daniel Jacob investigates circumpolar rivers as a major source of mercury in the Arctic (Harvard Magazine) Environment, Oct 14, 2012 Applied physics as art Researchers spray-paint ultrathin coatings that change color with only a few atoms' difference in thickness Applied Physics, Oct 2, 2012 An engineering landmark SEAS, at work on ambitious goals, pauses to celebrate its history (Harvard Gazette) Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 229 Page 230 Current page 231 Page 232 Page 233 … Page 302 302 Page 303 303 Next page › Last page »
Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Nov 8, 2012 Faculty member James N. Butler passes away at 78 Appointed as Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Chemistry, he taught at Harvard for 30 years; Memorial service will be held on November 10 Environment,
Nov 6, 2012 Counting votes, in the precinct and on the Web How computational scientists are rethinking U.S. elections—and making e-commerce smarter Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, AI / Machine Learning,
Oct 31, 2012 Assembly not required Researchers from NYU, Harvard, and Dow Chemical create new microparticles that self-assemble like atoms into molecules Materials, Applied Physics,
Oct 31, 2012 Paths to success HGWISE Mentoring Program recognizes the impact of a great role model (GSAS News) Electrical Engineering, Diversity / Inclusion, Applied Physics,
Oct 21, 2012 Targeting solar geoengineering to minimize risk and inequality New study suggests that solar geoengineering can be tailored to reduce inequality or to manage specific risks like the loss of Arctic sea ice Environment, Climate, Applied Physics,
Oct 16, 2012 Jelly-like atmospheric particles resist chemical aging Findings will affect scientific models of cloud formation and light absorption Environment, Climate,
Oct 16, 2012 An Arctic mercury meltdown Daniel Jacob investigates circumpolar rivers as a major source of mercury in the Arctic (Harvard Magazine) Environment,
Oct 14, 2012 Applied physics as art Researchers spray-paint ultrathin coatings that change color with only a few atoms' difference in thickness Applied Physics,
Oct 2, 2012 An engineering landmark SEAS, at work on ambitious goals, pauses to celebrate its history (Harvard Gazette)