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 2560 of 3025 results Jan 6, 2011 Simple rubber devices mimic complex bird-songs A team from Harvard and Brown who were "just playing around" make a profound insight about biology (BBC News) Applied Mathematics, Dec 22, 2010 ES 51 drives home the principles of engineering design Final project challenges students to convert parts from a cordless electric screwdriver into a remote-controlled, all-terrain vehicle Academics, Dec 21, 2010 Five lessons from "Commercializing Science" Course co-taught by engineering and business profs offers common sense advice on getting to market (Fast Company) Dec 17, 2010 Digitized book project unveils a quantitative "cultural genome" Online tool developed by Harvard and Google can identify cultural trends across the centuries Computer Science, Dec 14, 2010 Waves and the waggle dance, all in search of a quick chat Holiday Lecture on the physics and biology of communication awes and delights with animal examples and demos Dec 14, 2010 Capasso lab demonstrates highly unidirectional "whispering gallery" microlasers Breakthrough elliptical cavity enables a wide range of applications in photonics Dec 14, 2010 "Magnetic sponge" could be new form of drug and cell delivery New material, called a macroporous ferrogel, can be compressed by an applied magnetic field and force out drugs, cells, or proteins Bioengineering, Dec 11, 2010 From secret memos to mirror sites Computer science and law Prof. Jonathan Zittrain weighs in on Wikileaks (Technology Review) Ethics, Computer Science, Dec 10, 2010 At last, the edible science fair Harvard students use imagination to stretch the limits of cuisine (Harvard Gazette) Dec 8, 2010 Op-ed: From crude oil to olive oil Dean Cherry A. Murray reflects on the past year, from serving on the BP commission to culinary engineering (THURJ) Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 254 Page 255 Current page 256 Page 257 Page 258 … Page 302 302 Page 303 303 Next page › Last page »
Jan 6, 2011 Simple rubber devices mimic complex bird-songs A team from Harvard and Brown who were "just playing around" make a profound insight about biology (BBC News) Applied Mathematics,
Dec 22, 2010 ES 51 drives home the principles of engineering design Final project challenges students to convert parts from a cordless electric screwdriver into a remote-controlled, all-terrain vehicle Academics,
Dec 21, 2010 Five lessons from "Commercializing Science" Course co-taught by engineering and business profs offers common sense advice on getting to market (Fast Company)
Dec 17, 2010 Digitized book project unveils a quantitative "cultural genome" Online tool developed by Harvard and Google can identify cultural trends across the centuries Computer Science,
Dec 14, 2010 Waves and the waggle dance, all in search of a quick chat Holiday Lecture on the physics and biology of communication awes and delights with animal examples and demos
Dec 14, 2010 Capasso lab demonstrates highly unidirectional "whispering gallery" microlasers Breakthrough elliptical cavity enables a wide range of applications in photonics
Dec 14, 2010 "Magnetic sponge" could be new form of drug and cell delivery New material, called a macroporous ferrogel, can be compressed by an applied magnetic field and force out drugs, cells, or proteins Bioengineering,
Dec 11, 2010 From secret memos to mirror sites Computer science and law Prof. Jonathan Zittrain weighs in on Wikileaks (Technology Review) Ethics, Computer Science,
Dec 10, 2010 At last, the edible science fair Harvard students use imagination to stretch the limits of cuisine (Harvard Gazette)
Dec 8, 2010 Op-ed: From crude oil to olive oil Dean Cherry A. Murray reflects on the past year, from serving on the BP commission to culinary engineering (THURJ)