Twenty-three MIT faculty honored as “Committed to Caring” for 2023-25
The honor recognizes professors for their outstanding mentorship of graduate students.
The honor recognizes professors for their outstanding mentorship of graduate students.
The device, based on simple tetromino shapes, could determine the direction and distance of a radiation source, with fewer detector pixels.
Software allows scientists to model shapeshifting proteins in native cellular environments.
The technology could offer a cheap, fast way to test for PFAS, which have been linked to cancer and other health problems.
Materials from MIT’s Distinctive Collections reveal stories of women at the Institute.
Nine postdocs and research scientists honored for contributions to the Institute.
Fellows honored for creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments.
The work will help researchers tune surface properties of perovskites, a promising alternative and supplement to silicon, for more efficient photovoltaics.
Applying a small voltage to a catalyst can increase the rates of reactions used in petrochemical processing, pharmaceutical manufacture, and many other processes.
Two professors and three additional alumni recognized for “dreaming up solutions to global challenges — advancing health, sustainability, and human connection.”
The finding provides new insights into the ultrafast control of magnetic materials, with potential to enable next-generation information processing technologies.
EMERGE program ignites interest in science through hands-on electron microscopy.
The award recognizes Solomon’s contributions to understanding ozone depletion and the creation of the Montreal Protocol.
Students from Course 5.111 (Principles of Chemical Science) were treated to a performance that brought to life the chemical structures and crystal field theory concepts covered in class.
A compound originally developed to treat cancer could be repurposed to treat polycystic kidney disease, an inherited condition that can lead to kidney failure.