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 2640 of 3090 results Nov 17, 2010 Methane-powered laptops may be closer than you think SEAS materials scientists unveil tiny, low-temperature methane fuel cells Nov 13, 2010 Breaking the ice before it begins Nanostructured materials repel water droplets before they have a chance to freeze Nov 13, 2010 Multi-touch tables bring therapeutic games within reach SDR Lab collaboration offers engaging therapy options to children with cerebral palsy (Vector) Nov 13, 2010 Mathematical model of red blood cells may predict risk of anemia Joint MGH-SEAS study exploits analysis commonly used in physics to uncover new details of human physiology Nov 6, 2010 Michael Tinkham, superconductivity pioneer, passes away at 82 Broad thinker advanced both the theoretical and experimental understanding of superconductivity Nov 4, 2010 When light speed is too slow Physics grad and former SEAS postdoctoral fellow Alex Wissner-Gross '07 awaits the day when the Earth becomes a programmable surface Nov 3, 2010 For Joanne Chang ’91, new cookbook is the frosting on the cake Applied math alumna opens third bakery, invents a "magic" frosting, and releases a cookbook (Boston Globe) Oct 30, 2010 SEAS students sweep 2010 Collegiate Inventors awards Current grad students and recent alumni win top prizes for innovations in tissue engineering, genomics, and intracellular probing Awards, Oct 29, 2010 Nadia Shalaby '97 (Ph.D.) is bringing power to the people CS grad and current MIT Fellow is developing a business project to jump-start the Egyptian solar industry (MIT News) Oct 29, 2010 Undergrads design 'sweet' catapults Flinging candy provides a tangible path from theory to model to lift-off Academics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 262 Page 263 Current page 264 Page 265 Page 266 … Page 308 308 Page 309 309 Next page › Last page »
Nov 17, 2010 Methane-powered laptops may be closer than you think SEAS materials scientists unveil tiny, low-temperature methane fuel cells
Nov 13, 2010 Breaking the ice before it begins Nanostructured materials repel water droplets before they have a chance to freeze
Nov 13, 2010 Multi-touch tables bring therapeutic games within reach SDR Lab collaboration offers engaging therapy options to children with cerebral palsy (Vector)
Nov 13, 2010 Mathematical model of red blood cells may predict risk of anemia Joint MGH-SEAS study exploits analysis commonly used in physics to uncover new details of human physiology
Nov 6, 2010 Michael Tinkham, superconductivity pioneer, passes away at 82 Broad thinker advanced both the theoretical and experimental understanding of superconductivity
Nov 4, 2010 When light speed is too slow Physics grad and former SEAS postdoctoral fellow Alex Wissner-Gross '07 awaits the day when the Earth becomes a programmable surface
Nov 3, 2010 For Joanne Chang ’91, new cookbook is the frosting on the cake Applied math alumna opens third bakery, invents a "magic" frosting, and releases a cookbook (Boston Globe)
Oct 30, 2010 SEAS students sweep 2010 Collegiate Inventors awards Current grad students and recent alumni win top prizes for innovations in tissue engineering, genomics, and intracellular probing Awards,
Oct 29, 2010 Nadia Shalaby '97 (Ph.D.) is bringing power to the people CS grad and current MIT Fellow is developing a business project to jump-start the Egyptian solar industry (MIT News)
Oct 29, 2010 Undergrads design 'sweet' catapults Flinging candy provides a tangible path from theory to model to lift-off Academics,