Newly tenured engineers
Thirteen tenure appointments are made in seven of eight academic departments in the School of Engineering.
Thirteen tenure appointments are made in seven of eight academic departments in the School of Engineering.
Highly qualified group of undergraduates brings prior lab experience, variety of interests, to pursue research opportunities in MIT labs.
2015 Rising Stars in Nuclear Science and Engineering Symposium highlights outstanding new work and celebrates women in the field.
New analysis shows how bombardier beetles produce an explosive defensive chemical jet.
MIT Assistant Professor Juejun Hu melds fundamental materials science and new device designs to enable flexible photonics and other applications.
Implantable device could allow doctors to test cancer drugs in patients before prescribing chemotherapy.
New technique uses carbon nanotube film to directly heat and cure composite materials.
Skoltech Center for Electrochemical Energy Storage brings together researchers from MIT and two Russian institutes to develop advanced batteries and fuel cells.
Acoustic device can rapidly isolate circulating tumor cells from patient blood samples.
MIT graduate student Bo Qing studies synthetic gels that could be used in better equipment to protect against traumatic injuries.
MIT biological engineering graduate student Frances Liu is studying ways to alter mechanical properties of cell environments to produce desired chemical outputs.
MIT associate professor brings a materials scientist's understanding to biochemical behavior in stem cells and organ tissue.
New technique could lead to long-lasting localized stimulation of brain tissue without external connections.
MIT is home to No. 1 graduate engineering program; Sloan is No. 5 business school.