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 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 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 2410 of 3150 results Feb 12, 2013 HIPPO global-scale air chemistry dataset now available Open-access data from 64 research flights offers insight into the global carbon cycle and aerosols for climate modeling Environment, Climate, Feb 7, 2013 Making optical molasses Lene Hau asks, "What would happen if I sent the fastest thing in the universe into the coldest thing ever made?" (Radiolab) Applied Physics, Feb 5, 2013 If you give a bioengineer a cookie... By studying hand motions, Maurice Smith is creating an instruction manual to help repair a broken-down brain Bioengineering, Jan 31, 2013 Competition that computes Teams of students from across Harvard mastered virtual foosball in second annual IACS Computational Challenge (Harvard Gazette) Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, Jan 30, 2013 A new life for lab equipment Harvard Labs Reuse List makes it easy for researchers to share equipment, reduce costs, and prevent waste Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering, Jan 24, 2013 An idea that changed the world ComputeFest panel, part of Wintersession, explains Markov's pivotal breakthrough from a lecture 100 years ago (Harvard Gazette) Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, Jan 23, 2013 Researchers see complexity in China's emissions Clean air bid faces resistance, Wall Street Journal reports Environment, Climate, Jan 18, 2013 Quirky video on adrenal glands wins Scientific American contest Top video, written by a SEAS postdoc, explains science with creativity, humor, and a shoestring budget Jan 10, 2013 Jennifer A. Lewis, pioneer in 3D printing and bioinspired materials, joins Harvard faculty Research explores microscale 3D printing for engineering and translational biology Materials, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 239 Page 240 Current page 241 Page 242 Page 243 … Page 314 314 Page 315 315 Next page › Last page »
Feb 12, 2013 HIPPO global-scale air chemistry dataset now available Open-access data from 64 research flights offers insight into the global carbon cycle and aerosols for climate modeling Environment, Climate,
Feb 7, 2013 Making optical molasses Lene Hau asks, "What would happen if I sent the fastest thing in the universe into the coldest thing ever made?" (Radiolab) Applied Physics,
Feb 5, 2013 If you give a bioengineer a cookie... By studying hand motions, Maurice Smith is creating an instruction manual to help repair a broken-down brain Bioengineering,
Jan 31, 2013 Competition that computes Teams of students from across Harvard mastered virtual foosball in second annual IACS Computational Challenge (Harvard Gazette) Computer Science, Applied Mathematics,
Jan 30, 2013 A new life for lab equipment Harvard Labs Reuse List makes it easy for researchers to share equipment, reduce costs, and prevent waste
Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering,
Jan 24, 2013 An idea that changed the world ComputeFest panel, part of Wintersession, explains Markov's pivotal breakthrough from a lecture 100 years ago (Harvard Gazette) Computer Science, Applied Mathematics,
Jan 23, 2013 Researchers see complexity in China's emissions Clean air bid faces resistance, Wall Street Journal reports Environment, Climate,
Jan 18, 2013 Quirky video on adrenal glands wins Scientific American contest Top video, written by a SEAS postdoc, explains science with creativity, humor, and a shoestring budget
Jan 10, 2013 Jennifer A. Lewis, pioneer in 3D printing and bioinspired materials, joins Harvard faculty Research explores microscale 3D printing for engineering and translational biology Materials,