MIT Corporation life member and biotech pioneer Henri Termeer dies at 71
Termeer built Genzyme from a startup into a biotech powerhouse, while becoming an innovator in rare-disease drug development.
Termeer built Genzyme from a startup into a biotech powerhouse, while becoming an innovator in rare-disease drug development.
Longtime Department of Physics professor assisted in nuclear bomb projects in England and Los Alamos, and was a leader in physics education.
Longtime professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering patented over a dozen inventions and inspired generations of engineers.
Longtime MIT professor was known for key contributions to aircraft and spacecraft designs.
Ross, who joined the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1997, relished the practical use of finance theory.
“Queen of carbon science” and recipient of Presidential Medal of Freedom and National Medal of Science led US scientific community, promoted women in STEM.
Innovative mathematician and longtime professor made key contributions to representation theory and Lie theory.
A leader in the development of advanced satellite communication systems, Morrow led Lincoln Laboratory for 21 years.
Longtime Nuclear Research Lab director made advances in nuclear and condensed-matter physics, nuclear materials, reactor technology, and nuclear medicine.
The former MIT Media Lab faculty member explored the intersections of play, learning, design, and technology.
Over 53 years at the Institute, Carnazzo made contributions to MIT offices of contract accounting, treasurer, and vice president for finance.
Longtime professor and former department head spent a lifetime investigating the mechanisms of visual perception.
Historian and prolific author served as an MIT professor for more than 50 years.
Scholar and noted expert in the life of French diplomat and political scientist Alexis de Tocqueville was an acclaimed MIT teacher.
The inventor of an early form of RAM had an outsized influence on organizational dynamics, supply chains, and sustainability.