Daniel Harlow awarded Packard Foundation Fellowship
Physics professor receives one of the most prestigious nongovernmental awards for early-career scientists.
Physics professor receives one of the most prestigious nongovernmental awards for early-career scientists.
Those selected for these positions receive additional support to pursue their research and develop their careers.
Physicists Tracy Slatyer and Netta Engelhardt and mathematicians Lisa Piccirillo and Nina Holden PhD ’18 are honored by the Breakthrough Prize Foundation.
Study finds quantum entanglement could, in principle, give a slight advantage in the game of blackjack.
Theoretical physicist William Detmold unlocks the mysteries of quarks, gluons, and their “strong interactions” at the subatomic level.
Senior Michelle Xu’s varied interests all involve a desire to understand the universe. “I was just never particularly picky about which way to figure it out,” she says.
A new analysis puts dark matter back in the game as a possible source of energy excess at the galactic center.
With help from next-generation particle accelerators, the approach may nail down the rate of oxygen production in the universe.
Tracy Slatyer hunts through astrophysical data for clues to the invisible universe.
MIT professor emeritus will share $3 million prize with Sergio Ferrara and Peter van Nieuwenhuizen for discovery of supergravity.
Technique can spot anomalous particle smashups that may point to phenomena beyond the Standard Model.
Eight faculty members are granted tenure in five science departments.
MIT’s Senthil Todadri and Xiao-Gang Wen will study highly entangled quantum matter in a collaboration supported by the Simons Foundation.
Shor awarded the $150,000 prize, named after a fifth-century B.C. Chinese scientist, for his groundbreaking theoretical work in the field of quantum computation.
The particle’s core withstands pressures higher than those inside a neutron star, according to a new study.