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 80 of 220 results Mar 8, 2012 Metamaterials may advance with new femtosecond laser technique "Lucky" combination of chemicals and laser pulses enables high-resolution, 3D patterning for futuristic optical materials Materials, Applied Physics, Feb 27, 2012 Reduction in U.S. carbon emissions attributed to cheaper natural gas Lower emission from power plants in 2009 was driven by competitive pricing of natural gas versus coal Environment, Climate, Feb 23, 2012 Metal nanoparticles shine with customizable color A new way to create and control color has implications for display screens and security tags Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Feb 3, 2012 Harvard researchers to receive high-performance computing grants Projects will advance both basic science and applications, and accelerate development of exascale computing systems Computer Science, Applied Physics, Dec 15, 2011 Powerful potential SEAS holiday lecture engages young learners with the wonders of energy Dec 9, 2011 Slow road to stability for emulsions Physical equilibrium, assumed to be almost instant, may take months or years for particles in oil-water mixtures Applied Physics, Nov 15, 2011 Dramatic diversity of columbine flowers explained by a simple change in cell shape To match pollinators' probing tongues, cells in floral spurs elongate, driving rapid speciation Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Jul 12, 2019 Going West Palo Alto event showcases Harvard SEAS tech startup scene Entrepreneurship, Events, Technology, Apr 3, 2011 Materials scientists at Harvard demonstrate the first macro-scale thin-film solid-oxide fuel cell Strong, nanostructured membrane enables scaling for practical clean-energy applications Materials, Environment, Applied Physics, Feb 28, 2011 Increasing processor efficiency by "shutting off the lights" Plug-and-play multi-core voltage regulator could lead to "smarter" smartphones, slimmer laptops, and energy-friendly data centers Environment, Electrical Engineering, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 6 Page 7 Current page 8 Page 9 Page 10 … Page 21 21 Page 22 22 Next page › Last page »
Mar 8, 2012 Metamaterials may advance with new femtosecond laser technique "Lucky" combination of chemicals and laser pulses enables high-resolution, 3D patterning for futuristic optical materials Materials, Applied Physics,
Feb 27, 2012 Reduction in U.S. carbon emissions attributed to cheaper natural gas Lower emission from power plants in 2009 was driven by competitive pricing of natural gas versus coal Environment, Climate,
Feb 23, 2012 Metal nanoparticles shine with customizable color A new way to create and control color has implications for display screens and security tags Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,
Feb 3, 2012 Harvard researchers to receive high-performance computing grants Projects will advance both basic science and applications, and accelerate development of exascale computing systems Computer Science, Applied Physics,
Dec 15, 2011 Powerful potential SEAS holiday lecture engages young learners with the wonders of energy
Dec 9, 2011 Slow road to stability for emulsions Physical equilibrium, assumed to be almost instant, may take months or years for particles in oil-water mixtures Applied Physics,
Nov 15, 2011 Dramatic diversity of columbine flowers explained by a simple change in cell shape To match pollinators' probing tongues, cells in floral spurs elongate, driving rapid speciation Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,
Jul 12, 2019 Going West Palo Alto event showcases Harvard SEAS tech startup scene Entrepreneurship, Events, Technology,
Apr 3, 2011 Materials scientists at Harvard demonstrate the first macro-scale thin-film solid-oxide fuel cell Strong, nanostructured membrane enables scaling for practical clean-energy applications Materials, Environment, Applied Physics,
Feb 28, 2011 Increasing processor efficiency by "shutting off the lights" Plug-and-play multi-core voltage regulator could lead to "smarter" smartphones, slimmer laptops, and energy-friendly data centers Environment, Electrical Engineering,