MIT juniors Thaddeus Cybulski and Stela Gaitani experiment with collision in "To Fold a Big Bang," a dance workshop given by guest choreographer Neta Pulvermacher. The collaboration was intended to be a theatrical exploration into "super-colllider" processes and ultimately generate a "CERN-like" event. The workshop explored questions such as, can we experience the origin of direction and intention physically and mentally? By "colliding," one dancer starts a movement in the other--is this predictable? What determines which collision, or meeting, will end in one result or another? Thomas F. DeFrantz, professor of music and theater arts (back left in each photo), was part of the workshop. Photo / Donna Coveney
The Certificate in Aerospace Innovation gives students the tools and confidence to be aerospace entrepreneurs during an inflection point in the industry.
Collaborating with a local climate technology company, MIT’s Self-Assembly Lab is pursuing scalable erosion solutions that mimic nature, harnessing ocean currents to expand islands and rebuild coastlines.