In The News

Q&A: Dina Katabi on a “smart” home with actual intelligence
Q&A: Dina Katabi on a “smart” home with actual intelligence

MIT professor is designing the next generation of smart wireless devices that will sit in the background, gathering and interpreting data, rather than being worn on the body.

Making catalytic surfaces more active to help decarbonize fuels and chemicals
Making catalytic surfaces more active to help decarbonize fuels and chemicals

A new approach increases the efficiency of chemical reactions that are key to many industrial processes.

Nanoscribe GT2 adds to MIT.nano fabrication capabilities
Nanoscribe GT2 adds to MIT.nano fabrication capabilities

3D lithography tool will provide ultra-precise creation of complex 3D structures at the micro- and nanoscale.

Mitigating hazards with vulnerability in mind
Mitigating hazards with vulnerability in mind

To mitigate natural hazards equitably, PhD candidate Ipek Bensu Manav of the MIT CSHub is incorporating social vulnerability into resilience engineering and hazard recovery.

J-WAFS announces 2021 Solutions Grants for commercializing water and food technologies
J-WAFS announces 2021 Solutions Grants for commercializing water and food technologies

This year’s projects address mobile evaporative vegetable preservation, portable water filtration, and dairy waste reduction.

Helping underrepresented doctoral students of color thrive in the broader MIT community
Helping underrepresented doctoral students of color thrive in the broader MIT community

For the past seven years, the MIT University Center for Exemplary Mentoring has created a robust infrastructure of resources, people, and support.

Who can bend light for cheaper internet?
Who can bend light for cheaper internet?

ARROW, a reconfigurable fiber optics network developed at MIT, aims to take on the end of Moore’s law.

Drug delivery capsule could replace injections for protein drugs
Drug delivery capsule could replace injections for protein drugs

The new pill can inject large quantities of monoclonal antibodies and other drugs into the lining of the stomach after being swallowed.

The boiling crisis — and how to avoid it
The boiling crisis — and how to avoid it

PhD student Madhumitha Ravichandran identifies the three main factors that trigger the boiling crisis through machine learning models.

3 Questions: Peko Hosoi on the data-driven reasoning behind MIT’s Covid-19 policies for the fall
3 Questions: Peko Hosoi on the data-driven reasoning behind MIT’s Covid-19 policies for the fall

“We have not played all our cards yet,” says the associate dean of engineering and co-founder of the Isolat modeling group.

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