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 2770 of 3177 results 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) Aug 3, 2010 Building a menagerie of mechanical creatures, from bees to termites Robert Wood is creating mechanical insects that could be used in agriculture, medicine—and even espionage (Bloomberg BusinessWeek) Jul 21, 2010 By “putting a ring on it," microparticles can be captured Silicon micro-ring resonator could help advance nanomanipulation Jul 7, 2010 Laser pioneer Capasso awarded Berthold Leibinger Zukunftspreis International award for excellent research on the application or generation of laser light cites his fundamental contributions to the field Jul 3, 2010 SEAS graduate student wins best student paper at RSS 2010 Robotics Science and Systems conference recognizes Pratheev Sreetharan's research on robotic wings Jul 1, 2010 Matt Welsh promoted to full professor; granted tenure Computer scientist develops and deploys sensor networks for real-world applications Jul 1, 2010 Law School's Zittrain to hold joint appointment with SEAS Leading expert on legal and policy issues surrounding the Internet will hold joint HLS-SEAS appointment Jun 29, 2010 Shape-shifting sheets automatically fold into multiple shapes Relying on origami techniques, researchers show programmable matter folding into a boat- or plane-shape Robotics, Electrical Engineering, Jun 29, 2010 New insights on the nature of that curious solid-fluid, glass The behavior of tiny, deformable spheres packed together has helped scientists understand how glass flows (Harvard Magazine) Jun 26, 2010 Two SEAS faculty selected for Frontiers of Engineering Symposium Debra Auguste and Shriram Ramanathan among the "creative young engineers" honored by the National Academy of Engineering Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 275 Page 276 Current page 277 Page 278 Page 279 … Page 317 317 Page 318 318 Next page › Last page »
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)
Aug 3, 2010 Building a menagerie of mechanical creatures, from bees to termites Robert Wood is creating mechanical insects that could be used in agriculture, medicine—and even espionage (Bloomberg BusinessWeek)
Jul 21, 2010 By “putting a ring on it," microparticles can be captured Silicon micro-ring resonator could help advance nanomanipulation
Jul 7, 2010 Laser pioneer Capasso awarded Berthold Leibinger Zukunftspreis International award for excellent research on the application or generation of laser light cites his fundamental contributions to the field
Jul 3, 2010 SEAS graduate student wins best student paper at RSS 2010 Robotics Science and Systems conference recognizes Pratheev Sreetharan's research on robotic wings
Jul 1, 2010 Matt Welsh promoted to full professor; granted tenure Computer scientist develops and deploys sensor networks for real-world applications
Jul 1, 2010 Law School's Zittrain to hold joint appointment with SEAS Leading expert on legal and policy issues surrounding the Internet will hold joint HLS-SEAS appointment
Jun 29, 2010 Shape-shifting sheets automatically fold into multiple shapes Relying on origami techniques, researchers show programmable matter folding into a boat- or plane-shape Robotics, Electrical Engineering,
Jun 29, 2010 New insights on the nature of that curious solid-fluid, glass The behavior of tiny, deformable spheres packed together has helped scientists understand how glass flows (Harvard Magazine)
Jun 26, 2010 Two SEAS faculty selected for Frontiers of Engineering Symposium Debra Auguste and Shriram Ramanathan among the "creative young engineers" honored by the National Academy of Engineering