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 270 of 626 results Jun 30, 2022 Conor Walsh wins Blavatnik National Award for Young Scientists Award supports Walsh’s work to improving mobility Bioengineering, Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering, Robotics, Jan 1, 2018 Single metalens focuses all colors of the rainbow in one point Ground-breaking lens opens new possibilities in virtual and augmented reality Optics / Photonics, Feb 27, 2020 The Tentacle Bot Octopus-inspired robot can grip, move, and manipulate a wide range of objects Robotics, Jul 30, 2019 A better way to train machine learning models Teaching AI to overcome human bias Computer Science, AI / Machine Learning, Aug 8, 2016 Transmitting energy in soft materials A new way to send mechanical signals through soft materials Materials, Jul 15, 2019 A material way to make Mars habitable Silica aerogel could warm the Martian surface similar to the way greenhouse gasses keep Earth warm Materials, Planetary Science, Oct 18, 2018 A clearer path to clean air in China Formaldehyde – not sulfur dioxide — may be the key to China’s stubborn problem of wintertime air pollution Climate, Oct 10, 2018 The culprit of superconductivity in cuprates Researchers shed light on underlying causes of high temperature superconductivity in copper-based materials Materials, Jul 4, 2019 Camera brings unseen world to light Portable polarization-sensitive camera could be used in machine vision, autonomous vehicles, security, atmospheric chemistry and more Optics / Photonics, Applied Physics, Oct 19, 2017 Making big data a little smaller Harvard computer scientist demonstrates 30-year-old theorem still best to reduce data and speed up algorithms Computer Science, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 25 Page 26 Current page 27 Page 28 Page 29 … Page 62 62 Page 63 63 Next page › Last page »
Jun 30, 2022 Conor Walsh wins Blavatnik National Award for Young Scientists Award supports Walsh’s work to improving mobility Bioengineering, Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering, Robotics,
Jan 1, 2018 Single metalens focuses all colors of the rainbow in one point Ground-breaking lens opens new possibilities in virtual and augmented reality Optics / Photonics,
Feb 27, 2020 The Tentacle Bot Octopus-inspired robot can grip, move, and manipulate a wide range of objects Robotics,
Jul 30, 2019 A better way to train machine learning models Teaching AI to overcome human bias Computer Science, AI / Machine Learning,
Aug 8, 2016 Transmitting energy in soft materials A new way to send mechanical signals through soft materials Materials,
Jul 15, 2019 A material way to make Mars habitable Silica aerogel could warm the Martian surface similar to the way greenhouse gasses keep Earth warm Materials, Planetary Science,
Oct 18, 2018 A clearer path to clean air in China Formaldehyde – not sulfur dioxide — may be the key to China’s stubborn problem of wintertime air pollution Climate,
Oct 10, 2018 The culprit of superconductivity in cuprates Researchers shed light on underlying causes of high temperature superconductivity in copper-based materials Materials,
Jul 4, 2019 Camera brings unseen world to light Portable polarization-sensitive camera could be used in machine vision, autonomous vehicles, security, atmospheric chemistry and more Optics / Photonics, Applied Physics,
Oct 19, 2017 Making big data a little smaller Harvard computer scientist demonstrates 30-year-old theorem still best to reduce data and speed up algorithms Computer Science,