News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Belonging Collective behavior Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Kirigami Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 110 of 220 results Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering, Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Oct 14, 2012 Applied physics as art Researchers spray-paint ultrathin coatings that change color with only a few atoms' difference in thickness Applied Physics, Jul 12, 2019 Going West Palo Alto event showcases Harvard SEAS tech startup scene Entrepreneurship, Events, Technology, Aug 1, 2012 Reluctant electrons enable "extraordinarily strong" negative refraction New technique using kinetic inductance shows promise for dramatic miniaturization of metamaterials Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Jul 20, 2012 NaCl to give way to RockSalt Harvard computer scientists develop a tool to improve software fault isolation Computer Science, Jul 16, 2012 To clean up the mine, let fungus reproduce New biogeochemical understanding of manganese oxidation lends insight to environmental remediation Environment, Bioengineering, Jul 6, 2012 Atmospheric scientists release first "bottom-up" estimates of China's CO2 emissions Estimates capitalize on instrumental measurements of CO2 in smokestacks and pollutants in the air by satellites and surface stations Environment, Climate, Apr 26, 2012 Slicing mitotic spindle with lasers, nanosurgeons unravel old pole-to-pole theory Quantitative research shows key organelle of cell division to be more complex than previously thought Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Mar 26, 2012 "Buckliball," an engineered buckling structure, advances folding materials Inspired by a toy, the collapsible buckliball represents a new class of 3D, origami-like structures Materials, Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 9 Page 10 Current page 11 Page 12 Page 13 … Page 21 21 Page 22 22 Next page › Last page »
Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering,
Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Oct 14, 2012 Applied physics as art Researchers spray-paint ultrathin coatings that change color with only a few atoms' difference in thickness Applied Physics,
Jul 12, 2019 Going West Palo Alto event showcases Harvard SEAS tech startup scene Entrepreneurship, Events, Technology,
Aug 1, 2012 Reluctant electrons enable "extraordinarily strong" negative refraction New technique using kinetic inductance shows promise for dramatic miniaturization of metamaterials Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,
Jul 20, 2012 NaCl to give way to RockSalt Harvard computer scientists develop a tool to improve software fault isolation Computer Science,
Jul 16, 2012 To clean up the mine, let fungus reproduce New biogeochemical understanding of manganese oxidation lends insight to environmental remediation Environment, Bioengineering,
Jul 6, 2012 Atmospheric scientists release first "bottom-up" estimates of China's CO2 emissions Estimates capitalize on instrumental measurements of CO2 in smokestacks and pollutants in the air by satellites and surface stations Environment, Climate,
Apr 26, 2012 Slicing mitotic spindle with lasers, nanosurgeons unravel old pole-to-pole theory Quantitative research shows key organelle of cell division to be more complex than previously thought Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Mar 26, 2012 "Buckliball," an engineered buckling structure, advances folding materials Inspired by a toy, the collapsible buckliball represents a new class of 3D, origami-like structures Materials, Bioengineering, Applied Physics,