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 Meet Our Faculty Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 440 of 468 results Dec 3, 2020 Alumni profile: Demi Ajayi, S.B. ’07 Finding meaning in data Alumni, Alumni Profile Apr 5, 2012 A data-driven war on crime Students in ES 96 use scientific tools to inform a unique combination of military tactics and police work (Nature) Academics, Sep 7, 2015 Poison in the Arctic and the cost of clean energy Hydroelectric energy may be more damaging to northern ecosystems than climate change Climate, Jan 10, 2020 Training for a new kind of leader A profile of Technology Innovation Fellow Sebastian Schwartz Computer Science, Entrepreneurship, Student Profile Jun 28, 2011 Jackson Pollock, artist and physicist? Mathematical analysis of Pollock's work highlights the artist's deliberateness and delight in natural phenomena Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Jan 18, 2011 Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer Robotics, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Oct 28, 2019 Compact depth sensor inspired by spiders Metalens sensor could be used for microrobotics, augmented reality, wearable devices Applied Physics, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, Aug 14, 2014 Inside the cell, an ocean of buffeting waves New understanding of the cytoplasm suggests active processes generate crucial forces Bioengineering, Jul 23, 2020 Getting a grip on near-field light Research advances particle manipulation, high resolution microscopy, communications and more Applied Physics, Optics / Photonics, Jun 23, 2014 Delivering drugs on cue Harvard team uses ultrasound and self-healing hydrogels to noninvasively deliver drugs at the right place and the right time Materials, Bioengineering, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 42 Page 43 Current page 44 Page 45 Page 46 … Page 47 47 Next page › Last page »
Apr 5, 2012 A data-driven war on crime Students in ES 96 use scientific tools to inform a unique combination of military tactics and police work (Nature) Academics,
Sep 7, 2015 Poison in the Arctic and the cost of clean energy Hydroelectric energy may be more damaging to northern ecosystems than climate change Climate,
Jan 10, 2020 Training for a new kind of leader A profile of Technology Innovation Fellow Sebastian Schwartz Computer Science, Entrepreneurship, Student Profile
Jun 28, 2011 Jackson Pollock, artist and physicist? Mathematical analysis of Pollock's work highlights the artist's deliberateness and delight in natural phenomena Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,
Jan 18, 2011 Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer Robotics, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Oct 28, 2019 Compact depth sensor inspired by spiders Metalens sensor could be used for microrobotics, augmented reality, wearable devices Applied Physics, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering,
Aug 14, 2014 Inside the cell, an ocean of buffeting waves New understanding of the cytoplasm suggests active processes generate crucial forces Bioengineering,
Jul 23, 2020 Getting a grip on near-field light Research advances particle manipulation, high resolution microscopy, communications and more Applied Physics, Optics / Photonics,
Jun 23, 2014 Delivering drugs on cue Harvard team uses ultrasound and self-healing hydrogels to noninvasively deliver drugs at the right place and the right time Materials, Bioengineering,