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 2630 of 3025 results Jun 10, 2010 Discovery in “pop” science reveals the elegant, complex way bubbles burst Rather than simply vanishing, ruptured bubbles create rings of smaller bubbles in a cascade effect Jun 10, 2010 Harvard ... Where no CPU is safe! Hanspeter Pfister and a group of "cool people" use GPU computing to to tackle some of the great scientific challenges of our times (NVISION) Jun 5, 2010 GnuBio, a Harvard spinout, aims to become an "eBay of Biomarkers" Collaboration with faculty member David Weitz brings open source to genome sequencing Jun 3, 2010 Weaving customizable nanofibers, stretching the limits of materials New technology has potential applications in tissue regeneration and high-performance textiles May 28, 2010 Applied physicists create building blocks for new class of optical circuits Scalable devices inspired by nature exhibit customizable optical properties suitable for applications ranging from sensors to invisibility cloaks Applied Physics, May 27, 2010 Eric Mazur among laser pioneers Recognition is part of LaserFest, a yearlong celebration of the 50th anniversary of the laser Applied Physics, May 26, 2010 Inspired by cotton candy, engineers put new spin on nanofibers Offering increased control and higher output, device could be a boon for industrial applications, from biocompatible materials to air filters Bioengineering, Applied Physics, May 25, 2010 Float like a mechanical butterfly Postdoctoral fellow Hiroto Tanaka and U. Tokyo colleagues demonstrates forward flight of swallowtail butterfly (Christian Science Monitor) Robotics, Electrical Engineering, May 20, 2010 Gu-Yeon Wei named Gordon McKay Professor of Electrical Engineering; appointed tenure Wei's work focuses on high-speed, low-power digital and mixed-signal circuits Electrical Engineering, May 19, 2010 Climate scientists consider how Kudzu increases ozone pollution SEAS's Loretta Mickley and Shiliang Wu, with colleagues at Stony Brook, say “the vine that ate the South" may affect the air (Stony Brook) Environment, Climate, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 261 Page 262 Current page 263 Page 264 Page 265 … Page 302 302 Page 303 303 Next page › Last page »
Jun 10, 2010 Discovery in “pop” science reveals the elegant, complex way bubbles burst Rather than simply vanishing, ruptured bubbles create rings of smaller bubbles in a cascade effect
Jun 10, 2010 Harvard ... Where no CPU is safe! Hanspeter Pfister and a group of "cool people" use GPU computing to to tackle some of the great scientific challenges of our times (NVISION)
Jun 5, 2010 GnuBio, a Harvard spinout, aims to become an "eBay of Biomarkers" Collaboration with faculty member David Weitz brings open source to genome sequencing
Jun 3, 2010 Weaving customizable nanofibers, stretching the limits of materials New technology has potential applications in tissue regeneration and high-performance textiles
May 28, 2010 Applied physicists create building blocks for new class of optical circuits Scalable devices inspired by nature exhibit customizable optical properties suitable for applications ranging from sensors to invisibility cloaks Applied Physics,
May 27, 2010 Eric Mazur among laser pioneers Recognition is part of LaserFest, a yearlong celebration of the 50th anniversary of the laser Applied Physics,
May 26, 2010 Inspired by cotton candy, engineers put new spin on nanofibers Offering increased control and higher output, device could be a boon for industrial applications, from biocompatible materials to air filters Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
May 25, 2010 Float like a mechanical butterfly Postdoctoral fellow Hiroto Tanaka and U. Tokyo colleagues demonstrates forward flight of swallowtail butterfly (Christian Science Monitor) Robotics, Electrical Engineering,
May 20, 2010 Gu-Yeon Wei named Gordon McKay Professor of Electrical Engineering; appointed tenure Wei's work focuses on high-speed, low-power digital and mixed-signal circuits Electrical Engineering,
May 19, 2010 Climate scientists consider how Kudzu increases ozone pollution SEAS's Loretta Mickley and Shiliang Wu, with colleagues at Stony Brook, say “the vine that ate the South" may affect the air (Stony Brook) Environment, Climate,