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 700 of 3177 results Oct 4, 2021 How apples get their shapes Using theory and experiments, researchers show how apples get their distinct cusp-like features Applied Mathematics, Bioengineering, Sep 16, 2021 First glimpse of hydrodynamic electron flow in 3D materials Research paves the way for new devices and new understanding of electron interactions Applied Physics, Materials, Quantum Engineering, Sep 14, 2021 How to protect structures from blowing winds and flowing water? Look to marine sponges Research finds the skeletal structure of a marine sponge suppresses vortex shedding better than current technologies Bioengineering, Design, Materials, Technology, Sep 13, 2021 How the brain accounts for uncertainties in motor planning Research sheds light on the incredible feats of the brain in light of uncertainty Bioengineering, Sep 8, 2021 Soft components for the next generation of soft robotics Soft valve paves the way for fully soft robots Robotics, Sep 2, 2021 Graduate student Q&A: Vanessa Sanchez Fashion designer-turned-engineer uses robotic textiles for assistive clothing Design, Graduate Student Profile, Materials, Student Profile Aug 31, 2021 Breathing humid and salt-enriched air reduces respiratory droplet generation May contribute to the effectiveness of cotton masks and reduce incidence of and death by COVID-19 near seacoasts COVID-19, Aug 25, 2021 Robot mimics the powerful punch of the mantis shrimp Research answers long-standing biological questions, paves the way for small but mighty robots Robotics, Aug 20, 2021 Harvard’s eardrum-restoring PhonoGraft enters commercial development 3D-printed graft developed by researchers at SEAS, Harvard’s Wyss Institute, and Mass Eye and Ear to be commercialized by Desktop Health, following the startup’s acquisition Health / Medicine, Industry, Materials, Technology, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 68 Page 69 Current page 70 Page 71 Page 72 … Page 317 317 Page 318 318 Next page › Last page »
Oct 4, 2021 How apples get their shapes Using theory and experiments, researchers show how apples get their distinct cusp-like features Applied Mathematics, Bioengineering,
Sep 16, 2021 First glimpse of hydrodynamic electron flow in 3D materials Research paves the way for new devices and new understanding of electron interactions Applied Physics, Materials, Quantum Engineering,
Sep 14, 2021 How to protect structures from blowing winds and flowing water? Look to marine sponges Research finds the skeletal structure of a marine sponge suppresses vortex shedding better than current technologies Bioengineering, Design, Materials, Technology,
Sep 13, 2021 How the brain accounts for uncertainties in motor planning Research sheds light on the incredible feats of the brain in light of uncertainty Bioengineering,
Sep 8, 2021 Soft components for the next generation of soft robotics Soft valve paves the way for fully soft robots Robotics,
Sep 2, 2021 Graduate student Q&A: Vanessa Sanchez Fashion designer-turned-engineer uses robotic textiles for assistive clothing Design, Graduate Student Profile, Materials, Student Profile
Aug 31, 2021 Breathing humid and salt-enriched air reduces respiratory droplet generation May contribute to the effectiveness of cotton masks and reduce incidence of and death by COVID-19 near seacoasts COVID-19,
Aug 25, 2021 Robot mimics the powerful punch of the mantis shrimp Research answers long-standing biological questions, paves the way for small but mighty robots Robotics,
Aug 20, 2021 Harvard’s eardrum-restoring PhonoGraft enters commercial development 3D-printed graft developed by researchers at SEAS, Harvard’s Wyss Institute, and Mass Eye and Ear to be commercialized by Desktop Health, following the startup’s acquisition Health / Medicine, Industry, Materials, Technology,