News 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 Community 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 Meet Our Faculty Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Research Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 2820 of 3236 results Aug 31, 2010 Lene Hau named World Dane 2010 Lauded scientist, known for stopping and exchanging light, honored for making a special contribution to placing Denmark on the map Aug 28, 2010 SEAS faculty to light up the tube Tune into shows on the Food Network and New England Sports Network (NESN) in August and September Aug 26, 2010 Mechanical engineer Aaron Dollar '07 (Ph.D.) named to TR35 Dollar, who worked in the lab of Robert Howe, lauded for his work on developing a flexible robotic hand Robotics, Bioengineering Aug 23, 2010 Frequent flying will create a "map" of the atmosphere Steve Wofsy and colleagues rely on a sophisticated jet to take pole-to-pole measurements (Nature) Environment, Climate Aug 21, 2010 A fond farewell to Craig Watjen '58 Friend, philanthropist, and Microsoft alum passes away at the age of 74 Aug 19, 2010 With password security, popularity is everything Unpopular passwords instead of strong ones can provide a better defense against statistical guessing attacks (NetworkWorld) Aug 14, 2010 Harvard and Australia join together to make water a priority Two-year project will engage experts and build on existing resources to deliver a series of policy related forums Aug 13, 2010 New nanoscale transistors allow sensitive probing inside cells Bioprobes offer first intracellular measurements with a semiconductor device Aug 9, 2010 Researchers demonstrate highly directional terahertz laser rays Advance in metamaterials leads to a new semiconductor laser suitable for security screening, chemical sensing and astronomy Aug 7, 2010 Friend, Madix elected as Fellows of the American Chemical Society Two SEAS affiliates are among the 192 ACS fellows who will be honored at the society's fall meeting Aug 6, 2010 SEAS grad students receive DOE fellowships Emily Gardel will use the fellowship to examine how bacteria can generate electricity and Cassandra Freyschlag will study low-cost, energy-saving synthetic catalytic processes Aug 4, 2010 Growing organs and helping wounds heal A strong, stretchy material could provide a scaffold for growing organs or making wounds heal faster (Technology Review) Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 233 Page 234 Current page 235 Page 236 Page 237 … Page 269 269 Page 270 270 Next page › Last page » Cutting-edge science delivered direct to your inbox. Join the Research Roundup mailing list. Subscribe
Aug 31, 2010 Lene Hau named World Dane 2010 Lauded scientist, known for stopping and exchanging light, honored for making a special contribution to placing Denmark on the map
Aug 28, 2010 SEAS faculty to light up the tube Tune into shows on the Food Network and New England Sports Network (NESN) in August and September
Aug 26, 2010 Mechanical engineer Aaron Dollar '07 (Ph.D.) named to TR35 Dollar, who worked in the lab of Robert Howe, lauded for his work on developing a flexible robotic hand Robotics, Bioengineering
Aug 23, 2010 Frequent flying will create a "map" of the atmosphere Steve Wofsy and colleagues rely on a sophisticated jet to take pole-to-pole measurements (Nature) Environment, Climate
Aug 21, 2010 A fond farewell to Craig Watjen '58 Friend, philanthropist, and Microsoft alum passes away at the age of 74
Aug 19, 2010 With password security, popularity is everything Unpopular passwords instead of strong ones can provide a better defense against statistical guessing attacks (NetworkWorld)
Aug 14, 2010 Harvard and Australia join together to make water a priority Two-year project will engage experts and build on existing resources to deliver a series of policy related forums
Aug 13, 2010 New nanoscale transistors allow sensitive probing inside cells Bioprobes offer first intracellular measurements with a semiconductor device
Aug 9, 2010 Researchers demonstrate highly directional terahertz laser rays Advance in metamaterials leads to a new semiconductor laser suitable for security screening, chemical sensing and astronomy
Aug 7, 2010 Friend, Madix elected as Fellows of the American Chemical Society Two SEAS affiliates are among the 192 ACS fellows who will be honored at the society's fall meeting
Aug 6, 2010 SEAS grad students receive DOE fellowships Emily Gardel will use the fellowship to examine how bacteria can generate electricity and Cassandra Freyschlag will study low-cost, energy-saving synthetic catalytic processes
Aug 4, 2010 Growing organs and helping wounds heal A strong, stretchy material could provide a scaffold for growing organs or making wounds heal faster (Technology Review)