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 Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion 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 2540 of 3129 results Dec 9, 2011 Computer scientist Margo Seltzer named 2011 ACM Fellow The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) cited her "contributions to data management and computing systems" Computer Science, Dec 9, 2011 Slow road to stability for emulsions Physical equilibrium, assumed to be almost instant, may take months or years for particles in oil-water mixtures Applied Physics, Dec 7, 2011 Capasso awarded honorary doctorate from Université Paris Diderot Applied physicist was called a "model to emulate" and "an exemplary 21st-century physicist" Applied Physics, Dec 6, 2011 Sinking ice and hovering foams Annual Science & Cooking Fair gives undergraduates a taste of science and engineering Cooking, Dec 2, 2011 SEAS heats up for winter 2012 January activities include something for all; topics range from engineering on the Gulf coast to sustainable biomedical materials Dec 1, 2011 Aiden wins 2011 GE & Science grand prize Harvard Fellow, PI of the Laboratory-at-Large at SEAS, and SEAS alum honored for outstanding research in molecular biology Applied Mathematics, Nov 30, 2011 Nano meets pharma at Harvard-BASF symposium Experts gather this week to discuss the efficient creation and delivery of nanoscale particles of drugs Technology, Bioengineering, Nov 21, 2011 Kilobots are leaving the nest Swarm of tiny, collaborative robots will be made available to researchers, educators, and enthusiasts Robotics, Computer Science, Nov 15, 2011 Dramatic diversity of columbine flowers explained by a simple change in cell shape To match pollinators' probing tongues, cells in floral spurs elongate, driving rapid speciation Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Nov 15, 2011 In new quantum-dot LED design, researchers turn troublesome molecules to their advantage A robust new architecture enables optimization for quantum-dot displays Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 252 Page 253 Current page 254 Page 255 Page 256 … Page 312 312 Page 313 313 Next page › Last page »
Dec 9, 2011 Computer scientist Margo Seltzer named 2011 ACM Fellow The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) cited her "contributions to data management and computing systems" Computer Science,
Dec 9, 2011 Slow road to stability for emulsions Physical equilibrium, assumed to be almost instant, may take months or years for particles in oil-water mixtures Applied Physics,
Dec 7, 2011 Capasso awarded honorary doctorate from Université Paris Diderot Applied physicist was called a "model to emulate" and "an exemplary 21st-century physicist" Applied Physics,
Dec 6, 2011 Sinking ice and hovering foams Annual Science & Cooking Fair gives undergraduates a taste of science and engineering Cooking,
Dec 2, 2011 SEAS heats up for winter 2012 January activities include something for all; topics range from engineering on the Gulf coast to sustainable biomedical materials
Dec 1, 2011 Aiden wins 2011 GE & Science grand prize Harvard Fellow, PI of the Laboratory-at-Large at SEAS, and SEAS alum honored for outstanding research in molecular biology Applied Mathematics,
Nov 30, 2011 Nano meets pharma at Harvard-BASF symposium Experts gather this week to discuss the efficient creation and delivery of nanoscale particles of drugs Technology, Bioengineering,
Nov 21, 2011 Kilobots are leaving the nest Swarm of tiny, collaborative robots will be made available to researchers, educators, and enthusiasts Robotics, Computer Science,
Nov 15, 2011 Dramatic diversity of columbine flowers explained by a simple change in cell shape To match pollinators' probing tongues, cells in floral spurs elongate, driving rapid speciation Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,
Nov 15, 2011 In new quantum-dot LED design, researchers turn troublesome molecules to their advantage A robust new architecture enables optimization for quantum-dot displays Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,