Featured video: Saving iguanas with science and engineering
Professor Otto Cordero and colleagues ask: Can microbiome engineering make the Galapagos marine iguana more resilient to climate change?
Professor Otto Cordero and colleagues ask: Can microbiome engineering make the Galapagos marine iguana more resilient to climate change?
By turning molecular structures into sounds, researchers gain insight into protein structures and create new variations.
Ranked at the top for the eighth straight year, the Institute also places first in 11 of 48 disciplines.
Findings show how to make confined bubbles develop uniformly, instead of in their usual scattershot way.
Seventeen appointments have been made in eight departments within the School of Engineering.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering honors students, postdocs, faculty, and staff at awards banquet; seniors present capstone projects.
Nine principal investigators from MIT will receive grants totaling over $1 million for solutions-oriented research into global food and water challenges.
Researchers at the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub study the many factors that influence a pavement’s environmental footprint.
Study investigates capillary-induced deformations in cement’s porous structure.
Faculty members recognized for excellence via a diverse array of honors, grants, and prizes over the last quarter.
Ubiquitous marine plants dissipate wave energy and could help protect vulnerable shorelines.
Associate Professor Otto Cordero and colleagues discover simple assembly rules for marine microbiomes.
A new method identifies opportunities to learn and adapt to changing temperature and precipitation trends.
MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub researchers outline a new pavement maintenance model that accounts for future uncertainties in cost and deterioration.
Ninth annual Research Speed Dating event fosters intradepartmental collaboration and facilitates discussion of future efforts to solve global issues.