National competition veterans pay it forward at regional science contest
More than 100 middle school students compete at the fourth Northeast Regional Science Bowl, hosted by students at MIT and sponsored by the School of Science.
More than 100 middle school students compete at the fourth Northeast Regional Science Bowl, hosted by students at MIT and sponsored by the School of Science.
Institute ranks within the top 2 in 17 of 48 subject areas.
System that generates coherent single particles of light could help pave the way for quantum information processors or communications.
Dance gives graduate student Lindsey Orgren an artistic outlet and fuels her passion for research, adding immeasurable value to her MIT experience.
The prestigious awards are supporting five innovative projects that challenge established norms and have the potential to be world-changing.
New results show how varying the recipe could bring these materials closer to commercialization.
Research from the lab of assistant professor of chemistry Gabriela Schlau-Cohen advances the understanding of plants' photosynthetic machinery.
New platform enables longitudinal studies of circulating tumor cells in mouse models of cancer.
Technique could yield insights into complex proteins involved in Alzheimer’s and other diseases.
Honor shared with John Hartwig of the University of California at Berkeley for their development of a process to improve the synthesis of large organic molecules.
Theoretical analysis distinguishes observed “holes” from the huge list of hypothetically possible ones.
Undergraduates from across the country learn the benefits of continuing their education in chemistry, chemical engineering, and materials science.
Five winners are recognized for their outstanding contributions to colleagues, the school, and the Institute.
Researchers develop a method to investigate how bacteria respond to starvation and to identify which proteins bind to the “magic spot” — ppGpp.
Whitehead Institute and MIT researchers uncover the detailed molecular structure of the sporopollenin polymer, an inert material key for the emergence of land plants.