News 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 Community 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 Meet Our Faculty Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Research Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 384 of 413 results Jun 8, 2011 Tut, tut: Microbial growth in pharaoh's tomb suggests burial was a rush job Ralph Mitchell, an expert in cultural heritage microbiology, investigates a “fingerprint” left by ancient Egyptian microbes Bioengineering Jun 1, 2011 Nanospray for nanodrugs New microfluidic device developed in Weitz lab can produce tiny drug particles for testing in development (Royal Society of Chemistry) Bioengineering, Applied Physics May 13, 2011 Kit Parker and Todd Zickler granted tenure Biomedical/tissue engineer and computer vision expert will help further strengthen interdisciplinary research at SEAS Computer Science, Bioengineering, Applied Physics Apr 29, 2011 Roger W. Brockett honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Pioneer in control systems theory recognized for his devotion to advising more than 60 graduate students Computer Science, Bioengineering, Academics Apr 28, 2011 SEAS receives $100k Grand Challenges Explorations Grant Aviva Presser Aiden '09 and colleagues to develop microbial-based cell phone charger to increase access to health care via mobile apps Environment, Bioengineering, Applied Physics Mar 30, 2011 ‘Triple Academies’ symposium will wrestle with genetics in the digital age Leading geneticists, legal experts, and technologists will convene on April 14 at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Ethics, Computer Science, Bioengineering Mar 21, 2011 How the lily blooms Harvard mathematicians reveal that ruffling at the edge of each petal drives the delicate flower to open, contradicting common theories of blooming Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics Mar 9, 2011 Graduate student Alice Chen wins 2011 Lemelson-MIT student prize $30,000 prize recognizes four individuals nationwide who show exceptional innovation and a portfolio of inventiveness Health / Medicine, Bioengineering Mar 7, 2011 Three SEAS grad students selected to present new technology at URES "Cathbot," multi-core voltage regulator, and biosensor chosen for high-profile presentation to venture capitalists and entrepreneurs Robotics, Health / Medicine, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering Mar 4, 2011 Bioengineer/soldier to head ROTC implementation committee Kevin Kit Parker will play key role as Harvard welcomes ROTC back to campus (Boston Globe) Bioengineering 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 Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 30 Page 31 Current page 32 Page 33 Page 34 … Page 35 35 Next page › Last page » Cutting-edge science delivered direct to your inbox. Join the Research Roundup mailing list. Subscribe
Jun 8, 2011 Tut, tut: Microbial growth in pharaoh's tomb suggests burial was a rush job Ralph Mitchell, an expert in cultural heritage microbiology, investigates a “fingerprint” left by ancient Egyptian microbes Bioengineering
Jun 1, 2011 Nanospray for nanodrugs New microfluidic device developed in Weitz lab can produce tiny drug particles for testing in development (Royal Society of Chemistry) Bioengineering, Applied Physics
May 13, 2011 Kit Parker and Todd Zickler granted tenure Biomedical/tissue engineer and computer vision expert will help further strengthen interdisciplinary research at SEAS Computer Science, Bioengineering, Applied Physics
Apr 29, 2011 Roger W. Brockett honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Pioneer in control systems theory recognized for his devotion to advising more than 60 graduate students Computer Science, Bioengineering, Academics
Apr 28, 2011 SEAS receives $100k Grand Challenges Explorations Grant Aviva Presser Aiden '09 and colleagues to develop microbial-based cell phone charger to increase access to health care via mobile apps Environment, Bioengineering, Applied Physics
Mar 30, 2011 ‘Triple Academies’ symposium will wrestle with genetics in the digital age Leading geneticists, legal experts, and technologists will convene on April 14 at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Ethics, Computer Science, Bioengineering
Mar 21, 2011 How the lily blooms Harvard mathematicians reveal that ruffling at the edge of each petal drives the delicate flower to open, contradicting common theories of blooming Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics
Mar 9, 2011 Graduate student Alice Chen wins 2011 Lemelson-MIT student prize $30,000 prize recognizes four individuals nationwide who show exceptional innovation and a portfolio of inventiveness Health / Medicine, Bioengineering
Mar 7, 2011 Three SEAS grad students selected to present new technology at URES "Cathbot," multi-core voltage regulator, and biosensor chosen for high-profile presentation to venture capitalists and entrepreneurs Robotics, Health / Medicine, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering
Mar 4, 2011 Bioengineer/soldier to head ROTC implementation committee Kevin Kit Parker will play key role as Harvard welcomes ROTC back to campus (Boston Globe) Bioengineering
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