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 2830 of 3184 results Mar 6, 2010 Hamsa Sridhar ’12 floats above the fray Math and physics concentrator, working in in the Capasso lab, gets her hands around quantum levitation (Crimson) Applied Physics, Mar 4, 2010 Erez Lieberman-Aiden wins 2010 Lemelson-MIT student prize $30,000 prize is awarded annually to individual who has shown exceptional innovation and a portfolio of inventiveness Mar 4, 2010 SEAS to create new concentration in Biomedical Engineering Enhanced curriculum will incorporate chemistry, biology, and engineering Bioengineering, Mar 3, 2010 Margo Seltzer honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Honor encourages and recognizes excellence and dedication to advising and mentoring at SEAS Computer Science, Academics, Mar 3, 2010 Senior Yakov Berenshteyn receives 2009 SAME Award $1,000 prize recognizes outstanding academic achievements by an undergraduate in engineering sciences Mar 3, 2010 Sorting device for biological reactions puts the power of a lab in a pocket Microfluidic technology increases efficiency, reduces costs, and could be a boon for synthetic biology Applied Physics, Mar 2, 2010 Typos mean big revenue for search giant Google SEAS and HBS researchers estimate that revenue from typosquatting is nearly $500M per year (Bostonist). Computer Science, Feb 26, 2010 Materials Scientist Shriram Ramanathan wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award $400k grant will support research on photon-oxide interactions Materials, Environment, Awards, Feb 24, 2010 Harvard undergrads "goin' mobile" How a group of seniors and their friends use their phones offers a glimpse of where consumer technology is heading (Wall Street Journal) Entrepreneurship, Computer Science, Feb 23, 2010 Simple math explains dramatic beak shape variation in Darwin’s finches Scaling and shear link morphology, genotype, and developmental genetics Bioengineering, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 281 Page 282 Current page 283 Page 284 Page 285 … Page 318 318 Page 319 319 Next page › Last page »
Mar 6, 2010 Hamsa Sridhar ’12 floats above the fray Math and physics concentrator, working in in the Capasso lab, gets her hands around quantum levitation (Crimson) Applied Physics,
Mar 4, 2010 Erez Lieberman-Aiden wins 2010 Lemelson-MIT student prize $30,000 prize is awarded annually to individual who has shown exceptional innovation and a portfolio of inventiveness
Mar 4, 2010 SEAS to create new concentration in Biomedical Engineering Enhanced curriculum will incorporate chemistry, biology, and engineering Bioengineering,
Mar 3, 2010 Margo Seltzer honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Honor encourages and recognizes excellence and dedication to advising and mentoring at SEAS Computer Science, Academics,
Mar 3, 2010 Senior Yakov Berenshteyn receives 2009 SAME Award $1,000 prize recognizes outstanding academic achievements by an undergraduate in engineering sciences
Mar 3, 2010 Sorting device for biological reactions puts the power of a lab in a pocket Microfluidic technology increases efficiency, reduces costs, and could be a boon for synthetic biology Applied Physics,
Mar 2, 2010 Typos mean big revenue for search giant Google SEAS and HBS researchers estimate that revenue from typosquatting is nearly $500M per year (Bostonist). Computer Science,
Feb 26, 2010 Materials Scientist Shriram Ramanathan wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award $400k grant will support research on photon-oxide interactions Materials, Environment, Awards,
Feb 24, 2010 Harvard undergrads "goin' mobile" How a group of seniors and their friends use their phones offers a glimpse of where consumer technology is heading (Wall Street Journal) Entrepreneurship, Computer Science,
Feb 23, 2010 Simple math explains dramatic beak shape variation in Darwin’s finches Scaling and shear link morphology, genotype, and developmental genetics Bioengineering,