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 90 of 220 results Dec 8, 2014 Injectable 3D vaccines could fight cancer and infectious diseases New findings show programmable biomaterials can be delivered using needle injection to induce an immune response and fight deadly diseases Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Feb 7, 2011 Clay-armored bubbles may have formed first protocells Discovery of inorganic, semipermeable clay vesicles indicates minerals could have played a key role in the origins of life Applied Physics, Dec 14, 2010 Capasso lab demonstrates highly unidirectional "whispering gallery" microlasers Breakthrough elliptical cavity enables a wide range of applications in photonics Oct 16, 2010 SDR Lab receives $2.3M NSF grant for “Life on Earth” Project will develop a multi-touch digital museum exhibit on evolution with cooperative learning activities Sep 23, 2014 Airway muscle-on-a-chip mimics asthma Tissue-level model of human airway musculature could pave way for patient-specific asthma treatments Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Sep 17, 2014 Engineers recruit bacteria as partners in innovation Harvard team lays foundation for using bacterial biofilms to produce new self-healing materials and bioprocessing technologies Bioengineering, Sep 11, 2014 Walsh to advance wearable robot design Harvard’s Wyss Institute awarded DARPA contract to further develop Soft Exosuit Robotics, Awards, Aug 4, 2014 Minuscule chips for NMR spectroscopy promise portability, parallelization Two-by-two-millimeter spectrometer dramatically shrinks footprint for multidimensional analysis of molecules Environment, Electrical Engineering, Jul 2, 2014 Roger W. Brockett receives AACC Ragazzini Education Award Control systems expert recognized "for inspirational mentorship of generations of graduate students" Bioengineering, Academics, Apr 23, 2014 Scientists characterize a new shape using rubber bands Form not found in nature could spur creation of new molecules Applied Physics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 7 Page 8 Current page 9 Page 10 Page 11 … Page 21 21 Page 22 22 Next page › Last page »
Dec 8, 2014 Injectable 3D vaccines could fight cancer and infectious diseases New findings show programmable biomaterials can be delivered using needle injection to induce an immune response and fight deadly diseases Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Feb 7, 2011 Clay-armored bubbles may have formed first protocells Discovery of inorganic, semipermeable clay vesicles indicates minerals could have played a key role in the origins of life Applied Physics,
Dec 14, 2010 Capasso lab demonstrates highly unidirectional "whispering gallery" microlasers Breakthrough elliptical cavity enables a wide range of applications in photonics
Oct 16, 2010 SDR Lab receives $2.3M NSF grant for “Life on Earth” Project will develop a multi-touch digital museum exhibit on evolution with cooperative learning activities
Sep 23, 2014 Airway muscle-on-a-chip mimics asthma Tissue-level model of human airway musculature could pave way for patient-specific asthma treatments Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Sep 17, 2014 Engineers recruit bacteria as partners in innovation Harvard team lays foundation for using bacterial biofilms to produce new self-healing materials and bioprocessing technologies Bioengineering,
Sep 11, 2014 Walsh to advance wearable robot design Harvard’s Wyss Institute awarded DARPA contract to further develop Soft Exosuit Robotics, Awards,
Aug 4, 2014 Minuscule chips for NMR spectroscopy promise portability, parallelization Two-by-two-millimeter spectrometer dramatically shrinks footprint for multidimensional analysis of molecules Environment, Electrical Engineering,
Jul 2, 2014 Roger W. Brockett receives AACC Ragazzini Education Award Control systems expert recognized "for inspirational mentorship of generations of graduate students" Bioengineering, Academics,
Apr 23, 2014 Scientists characterize a new shape using rubber bands Form not found in nature could spur creation of new molecules Applied Physics,