SuperUROP: Showcasing students' research work in progress
Undergraduate researchers discussed their projects at a well-attended poster session.
Undergraduate researchers discussed their projects at a well-attended poster session.
Low-cost sensors on Hawaii's Kilauea volcano provide an educational resource and give insight into air quality across Big Island.
Chemical engineering professor had a passion for cleaner combustion and was a refugee who helped Raoul Wallenberg rescue Jews in Nazi-occupied Hungary.
Undergraduates from across the country learn the benefits of continuing their education in chemistry, chemical engineering, and materials science.
Patients with lung disease could find relief by breathing in messenger RNA molecules.
A new concept for thermal energy storage involves a material that absorbs heat as it melts and releases it as it resolidifies — but only when triggered by light.
Technique for preserving tissue allows researchers to create maps of neural circuits with single-cell resolution.
Faculty researchers share insights into new capabilities at the annual Industrial Liaison Program Research and Development Conference.
Electronic pill can relay diagnostic information or release drugs in response to smartphone commands.
Forbes calls its 2019 30 Under 30 honorees “a collection of bold risk-takers who are putting a new twist on the old tools of the trade.”
Injectable material made of nanoscale particles can deliver arthritis drugs throughout cartilage.
Jacqueline Hewitt, Kristala Prather, and John Lienhard are among those recognized for their efforts to advance science.
The School of Engineering’s faculty leadership weigh in on what the MIT Stephen A. Schwarzman College of Computing will mean for their students and faculty.
With a love for the environment that took root on his family’s farm, senior Jesse Hinricher aims to put less expensive components into more efficient batteries.
New leadership team named for the Institute's interdisciplinary hub for advanced thinking in the science and engineering of computation.