The power of play
Video game developer NCSOFT joins with MIT.nano to apply the language of gaming to technology research and education.
Video game developer NCSOFT joins with MIT.nano to apply the language of gaming to technology research and education.
Loosely connected disc-shaped “particles” can push and pull one another, moving en masse to transport objects.
MIT researchers find a new way to make nanoscale measurements of fields in more than one dimension.
System uses RFID tags to home in on targets; could benefit robotic manufacturing, collaborative drones, and other applications.
Brent Minchew has flown presidents and foreign dignitaries on Marine One. Today he studies how ice sheets evolve and respond to changing climate.
Low-cost sensors on Hawaii's Kilauea volcano provide an educational resource and give insight into air quality across Big Island.
Soft, squishy device could potentially track ulcers, cancers, and other GI conditions over the long term.
Simple, scalable wireless system uses the RFID tags on billions of products to sense contamination.
Technique from MIT could lead to tiny, self-powered devices for environmental, industrial, or medical monitoring.
Study finds shoebox-sized CubeSats gather weather data comparably to data collected by larger satellites.
PhD student David Layden in the Quantum Engineering Group has a new approach to spatial noise filtering that boosts development of ultra-sensitive quantum sensors.
Tiny probes could be useful for monitoring patients with Parkinson’s and other diseases.
AeroAstro grad students win multi-university challenge by demonstrating the utility of machine vision in a complex system.
Lincoln Laboratory team's lidar data will allow FEMA to track further damage if another hurricane strikes the island.
CSAIL wireless system suggests future where doctors could implant sensors to track tumors or even dispense drugs.