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 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 84 of 84 results Aug 1, 2012 Reluctant electrons enable "extraordinarily strong" negative refraction New technique using kinetic inductance shows promise for dramatic miniaturization of metamaterials Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Feb 23, 2012 Metal nanoparticles shine with customizable color A new way to create and control color has implications for display screens and security tags Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Sep 26, 2011 "Next-generation" optical tweezers trap tightly without overheating Improved device eliminates a barrier to handling nanoscale particles Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics, Sep 1, 2011 From a flat mirror, designer light Researchers at Harvard create bizarre optical phenomena, defying the laws of reflection and refraction Optics / Photonics, Applied Physics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Current page 9
Aug 1, 2012 Reluctant electrons enable "extraordinarily strong" negative refraction New technique using kinetic inductance shows promise for dramatic miniaturization of metamaterials Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,
Feb 23, 2012 Metal nanoparticles shine with customizable color A new way to create and control color has implications for display screens and security tags Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,
Sep 26, 2011 "Next-generation" optical tweezers trap tightly without overheating Improved device eliminates a barrier to handling nanoscale particles Optics / Photonics, Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics,
Sep 1, 2011 From a flat mirror, designer light Researchers at Harvard create bizarre optical phenomena, defying the laws of reflection and refraction Optics / Photonics, Applied Physics,