QS World University Rankings rates MIT No. 1 in 11 subjects for 2023
The Institute also ranks second in five subject areas.
The Institute also ranks second in five subject areas.
CSAIL research affiliate and MIT Corporation life member emeritus is honored with the “Nobel Prize of computing” for Ethernet invention.
New LiGO technique accelerates training of large machine-learning models, reducing the monetary and environmental cost of developing AI applications.
The teams will work toward sustainable microchips and topological materials as well as socioresilient materials design.
In MIT visit, CEO Pat Gelsinger sounds a bullish note on the future of U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.
J-WAFS researchers are using remote sensing observations to build high-resolution systems to monitor drought.
Project will develop new materials characterization tools and technologies to assign unique identifiers to individual pearls.
Optics and photonics awards go to Professor Marin Soljacic as well as alumni Vanderlei Salvador Bagnato, Turan Erdogan, Harold Metcalf, and Andrew Weiner.
Financial aid support remains strong, offsetting a 3.75 percent rise in tuition, and changes to housing, dining, and other costs.
Work of the Future Initiative co-directors Julie Shah and Ben Armstrong describe their vision of “positive-sum automation.”
A new system enables makers to incorporate sensors into gears and other rotational mechanisms with just one pass in a 3D printer.
Using this approach, researchers hope to deliver therapeutic RNA molecules selectively to cancer cells or other target cells.
New repair techniques enable microscale robots to recover flight performance after suffering severe damage to the artificial muscles that power their wings.
Codon compiles Python code to run more efficiently and effectively while allowing for customization and adaptation to various domains.
Cambridge families and friends filled the Kendall/MIT Open Space at Winter Family Day.