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 2690 of 3177 results Feb 22, 2011 Debra Auguste wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award Grant will support research on molecular aspects of drug delivery as well as educational programs Bioengineering, Awards, Feb 21, 2011 Applied physicists discover that migrating cells flow like glass Harvard-led research advances understanding of wound healing, cancer metastasis, and embryonic development Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Feb 18, 2011 Shriram Ramanathan wins 2011 Robert Lansing Hardy Award Materials scientist honored for innovative contributions to the synthesis, study and applications of thin film oxides Feb 17, 2011 Photo of Centipede-bot wins honorable mention from Science Graduate student Katie Hoffman's 12-legged, segmented robot honored in Visualization Challenge 2010 Robotics, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering, Feb 15, 2011 A small city that boasts big ideas, bright minds Five Cambridge-born innovations (two from SEAS) that are about to change the world (Improper Bostonian) Feb 9, 2011 Researchers at Harvard and MITRE produce world’s first programmable nanoprocessor Nanowire tiles can perform arithmetic and logical functions and are fully scalable Electrical Engineering, Feb 7, 2011 Ling Qin wins 2011 Analog Devices student design award Ph.D. candidate from Donhee Ham's lab lauded for "academic excellence and research promise." Electrical Engineering, Feb 7, 2011 Clay-armored bubbles may have formed first protocells Discovery of inorganic, semipermeable clay vesicles indicates minerals could have played a key role in the origins of life Applied Physics, Feb 3, 2011 Stealing from Nature Joanna Aizenberg escapes conventional expectations by “stealing” ingenious designs from Nature (Radcliffe Magazine) Feb 3, 2011 Applied knowledge opens doors for young alumni Five recent SEAS undergraduate alumni came back to campus for a lively Q&A session Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 267 Page 268 Current page 269 Page 270 Page 271 … Page 317 317 Page 318 318 Next page › Last page »
Feb 22, 2011 Debra Auguste wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award Grant will support research on molecular aspects of drug delivery as well as educational programs Bioengineering, Awards,
Feb 21, 2011 Applied physicists discover that migrating cells flow like glass Harvard-led research advances understanding of wound healing, cancer metastasis, and embryonic development Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Feb 18, 2011 Shriram Ramanathan wins 2011 Robert Lansing Hardy Award Materials scientist honored for innovative contributions to the synthesis, study and applications of thin film oxides
Feb 17, 2011 Photo of Centipede-bot wins honorable mention from Science Graduate student Katie Hoffman's 12-legged, segmented robot honored in Visualization Challenge 2010 Robotics, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering,
Feb 15, 2011 A small city that boasts big ideas, bright minds Five Cambridge-born innovations (two from SEAS) that are about to change the world (Improper Bostonian)
Feb 9, 2011 Researchers at Harvard and MITRE produce world’s first programmable nanoprocessor Nanowire tiles can perform arithmetic and logical functions and are fully scalable Electrical Engineering,
Feb 7, 2011 Ling Qin wins 2011 Analog Devices student design award Ph.D. candidate from Donhee Ham's lab lauded for "academic excellence and research promise." Electrical Engineering,
Feb 7, 2011 Clay-armored bubbles may have formed first protocells Discovery of inorganic, semipermeable clay vesicles indicates minerals could have played a key role in the origins of life Applied Physics,
Feb 3, 2011 Stealing from Nature Joanna Aizenberg escapes conventional expectations by “stealing” ingenious designs from Nature (Radcliffe Magazine)
Feb 3, 2011 Applied knowledge opens doors for young alumni Five recent SEAS undergraduate alumni came back to campus for a lively Q&A session