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 2980 of 3136 results Jan 11, 2008 Winging it Jessica K. Shang ’08 is working with Prof. Rob Wood to build a microrobotic dragonfly (Crimson) Jan 8, 2008 Favorite things Editors of Nature chose papers by SEAS graduate student Erez Lieberman and faculty member Lene Hau as among their favorites for 2007 (Nature) Jan 3, 2008 Natural thoughts NPR interviewed Steven Wofsy, who monitors carbon activity, as part of a profile of Harvard's 3,000 acre forest laboratory (NPR) Jan 3, 2008 Intersections of art and science NPR chats with bioengineering faculty member David Edwards about his new book and creative space (NPR) Dec 18, 2007 Physicists make ripples with their 'magic carpet' L. Mahadevan and colleagues study the "aerodynamics of a flexible, rippling sheet moving through a fluid." (Nature) Dec 13, 2007 Jackie Stenson '08 named 'most interesting' The Crimson named ES concentrator as one of the 15 most interesting seniors in the class of 2008 (Crimson) Dec 8, 2007 Howard A. Stone wins G. K. Batchelor prize Microfluidics expert is the first winner of the prize for fluid mechanics for research published over the past ten years Dec 5, 2007 Compact, wavelength-on-demand Quantum Cascade Laser chip offers ultra-sensitive chemical sensing Potential range of applications is huge Dec 5, 2007 Moving from industry to academia Shriram Ramanathan and others discuss making the transition from corporate life to the halls of academia (C&EN) Nov 30, 2007 A big lab for small-scale science Harvard’s nanotechnology research finds a new home in the Laboratory for Integrated Science and Engineering (Crimson) Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 296 Page 297 Current page 298 Page 299 Page 300 … Page 313 313 Page 314 314 Next page › Last page »
Jan 11, 2008 Winging it Jessica K. Shang ’08 is working with Prof. Rob Wood to build a microrobotic dragonfly (Crimson)
Jan 8, 2008 Favorite things Editors of Nature chose papers by SEAS graduate student Erez Lieberman and faculty member Lene Hau as among their favorites for 2007 (Nature)
Jan 3, 2008 Natural thoughts NPR interviewed Steven Wofsy, who monitors carbon activity, as part of a profile of Harvard's 3,000 acre forest laboratory (NPR)
Jan 3, 2008 Intersections of art and science NPR chats with bioengineering faculty member David Edwards about his new book and creative space (NPR)
Dec 18, 2007 Physicists make ripples with their 'magic carpet' L. Mahadevan and colleagues study the "aerodynamics of a flexible, rippling sheet moving through a fluid." (Nature)
Dec 13, 2007 Jackie Stenson '08 named 'most interesting' The Crimson named ES concentrator as one of the 15 most interesting seniors in the class of 2008 (Crimson)
Dec 8, 2007 Howard A. Stone wins G. K. Batchelor prize Microfluidics expert is the first winner of the prize for fluid mechanics for research published over the past ten years
Dec 5, 2007 Compact, wavelength-on-demand Quantum Cascade Laser chip offers ultra-sensitive chemical sensing Potential range of applications is huge
Dec 5, 2007 Moving from industry to academia Shriram Ramanathan and others discuss making the transition from corporate life to the halls of academia (C&EN)
Nov 30, 2007 A big lab for small-scale science Harvard’s nanotechnology research finds a new home in the Laboratory for Integrated Science and Engineering (Crimson)