In The News

Unlocking the potential of blockchain technology
Unlocking the potential of blockchain technology

Algorand uses a unique architecture developed by MIT Professor Silvio Micali to offer a decentralized, secure, and scalable blockchain.

Karthish Manthiram named 2021 Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar
Karthish Manthiram named 2021 Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar

Assistant professor receives honor for young academics who combine outstanding teaching with impressive independent scholarship in the chemical sciences.

Creating “digital twins” at scale
Creating “digital twins” at scale

Model could help predictive virtual models become standard practice in engineering.

Stents inspired by paper-cutting art can deliver drugs to the GI tract
Stents inspired by paper-cutting art can deliver drugs to the GI tract

MIT engineers used kirigami-style etching to design a stent that can temporarily lodge in tubular organs to release drugs.

VELION focused ion beam scanning electron microscope expands MIT.nano capabilities
VELION focused ion beam scanning electron microscope expands MIT.nano capabilities

FIB-SEM is now available to researchers across the Institute for use in characterization, nanofabrication, and rapid prototyping.

Portable technology offers boost for nuclear security, arms control
Portable technology offers boost for nuclear security, arms control

MIT team devises compact, affordable system for identifying elemental composition of nuclear and other materials.

Could all your digital photos be stored as DNA?
Could all your digital photos be stored as DNA?

A technique for labeling and retrieving DNA data files from a large pool could help make DNA data storage feasible.

MIT study compares the four largest internet meganetworks
MIT study compares the four largest internet meganetworks

With thousands of satellites, each network could beam down tens of terabits per second, filling gaps left by land-based services.

Training robots to manipulate soft and deformable objects
Training robots to manipulate soft and deformable objects

A virtual environment embedded with knowledge of the physical world speeds up problem-solving.

STEM + humanities = a framework for understanding the world
STEM + humanities = a framework for understanding the world

Natasha Joglekar ’21 is eager to apply her MIT education, with a major in computer science and biology and a minor in women’s and gender studies, to a career in medical research.

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