Laser-focused: Four MIT students foster new insights into inertial confinement fusion
Undergraduate research opportunities in the Plasma Science and Fusion Center’s High-Energy-Density Physics division support multiple fusion collaborations.
Undergraduate research opportunities in the Plasma Science and Fusion Center’s High-Energy-Density Physics division support multiple fusion collaborations.
Honorees will engage in the life of the Institute through teaching, research, and other interactions with the MIT community.
Findings related to bacterial gene expression overturn fundamental assumptions about basic biological pathways.
A binary black hole merger likely produced gravitational waves equal to the energy of eight suns.
Researchers suggest a novel process to explain the collision of a large black hole and a much smaller one.
With creativity and hard work, the Institute is striving to provide the best possible experience for the Class of 2024.
Building quantum computers underground or designing radiation-proof qubits may be needed, researchers find.
IAIFI will advance physics knowledge — from the smallest building blocks of nature to the largest structures in the universe — and galvanize AI research innovation.
Despite the planet’s seeming standstill, graduate students continue to use LIGO to identify astrophysical events.
Astrophysicist and associate head of the physics department will succeed Michael Sipser.
Funding will support using light to study quantum materials and on twistronics research to advance superconductivity and quantum technologies.
By making their own lava and cooled glass, scientists find these materials likely aren’t responsible for the unexpected glow of some exoplanets.
Study finds quantum entanglement could, in principle, give a slight advantage in the game of blackjack.
MIT physicist led government-backed effort to study the challenges and solutions surrounding campus lab work.
Researchers devise an on-off system that allows high-fidelity operations and interconnection between processors.