MIT students study plasma physics beneath Alaska’s aurora
Student-led expeditions use distributed instruments to observe auroral structures and probe space plasma in real-world conditions.
Student-led expeditions use distributed instruments to observe auroral structures and probe space plasma in real-world conditions.
MIT senior Nik Sandu bridges scientific research with a strong commitment to teaching and community.
Six MIT faculty, along with 10 additional alumni, are recognized by their peers for their outstanding contributions to research in the natural and social sciences.
Ferrium C61 was designed with the aid of computers in a field pioneered at the Institute.
Connor Coley works at the interface of chemistry and machine learning, to discover and design new drug compounds.
MIT faculty member in electrical engineering and computer science to focus on innovation in engineering education and new pedagogical approaches.
By rapidly generating a smooth path plan that cuts travel time and avoids obstacles, the open-source “MIGHTY” system could streamline disaster recovery and parcel delivery.
The MIT Marble Center for Cancer Nanomedicine looks back at 10 years of turning big ideas about nanotechnology into transformative advances for cancer patients.
The prestigious fellowship funds graduate studies at Stanford University.
In 2.72/2.270 (Elements of Mechanical Design), “if it doesn’t break the laws of physics, it’s possible; you just have to figure out how to engineer it.”
Akorfa Dagadu, an MIT senior in chemical engineering, learns the importance of community-engaged research and innovation through the PKG Center for Social Impact.
The professor of medical engineering and science is honored for medical research that has led to better treatments for cardiovascular disease.
A new method for precisely moving columns of individual atoms within a material could give rise to exotic quantum properties.
Using immune-remodeling mRNA molecules, researchers generated T cells that can slow tumor growth and, in some cases, eradicate tumors.
In a nod to the prank that first introduced the smoot, an MIT team rolls out the “klein” in homage to Martin Klein ’62 and playfully renames a beloved Charles River span the “Shortfellow Bridge.”