Search Results Search (-) All (637) News (636) People (1) How to protect structures from blowing winds and flowing water? Look to marine sponges September 14, 2021 Research finds the skeletal structure of a marine sponge suppresses vortex shedding better than current technologies Tunable windows for privacy, camouflage March 14, 2016 Method turns glass from clear to opaque with the flick of a switch First 2D neural network September 4, 2020 Atomically thin machine vision processor mimics the human eye Oil and natural gas production emit more methane than previously thought March 22, 2021 Research finds EPA underestimates methane emissions from oil and gas production David Weitz elected to the National Academy of Engineering February 8, 2016 Applied physicist honored for his contributions to engineering How cells tick February 2, 2016 New work sheds light on the structure of the cell cycle in bacteria and budding yeast Making big data a little smaller October 19, 2017 Harvard computer scientist demonstrates 30-year-old theorem still best to reduce data and speed up algorithms Bridging the terahertz gap October 16, 2017 Optical frequency comb offers a convenient way to generate elusive terahertz frequencies Shaping animal, vegetable and mineral October 16, 2017 Researchers develop mathematical techniques for designing shape-shifting shells A platform for stable quantum computing, a playground for exotic physics December 6, 2019 Recent research settles a long-standing debate Metalens grows up December 3, 2019 Researchers develop a mass-producible, centimeter-scale metalens for VR, imaging Imagining a world without species September 20, 2017 Applied mathematician rethinks how we differentiate organisms on the microbial scale Portable, injectable clotting agent could treat trauma victims on the front lines July 31, 2020 Hemostat slows internal bleeding by 97 percent in mice Harvard researchers develop tough, self-healing rubber August 14, 2017 Potential applications include more durable tires, wearable electronics, medical devices Safely releasing genetically modified genes into the wild August 1, 2017 Researchers explore how to effectively release and control engineered species How bacteria maintain and recover their shape July 26, 2017 Mechanical stress may cue shape recovery in bacteria New faces, new frontiers September 22, 2015 New faculty bring expertise on neural networks, batteries, and the origin of life Empty “backpacks” activate the immune system against cancer March 18, 2024 Neutrophils bearing polymer microparticles can be harnessed as a drug-free way to shrink tumors Programmable balloons pave the way for new shape-morphing devices July 7, 2020 Kirigami balloons could be used in medical devices, soft robotics Researchers develop technique to control and measure electron spin voltage July 13, 2017 New tool may provide insight into spintronic devices and exotic physics Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 11 Page 12 Current page 13 Page 14 Page 15 … Page 32 32 Page 33 33 Next page › Last page »
How to protect structures from blowing winds and flowing water? Look to marine sponges September 14, 2021 Research finds the skeletal structure of a marine sponge suppresses vortex shedding better than current technologies
Tunable windows for privacy, camouflage March 14, 2016 Method turns glass from clear to opaque with the flick of a switch
First 2D neural network September 4, 2020 Atomically thin machine vision processor mimics the human eye
Oil and natural gas production emit more methane than previously thought March 22, 2021 Research finds EPA underestimates methane emissions from oil and gas production
David Weitz elected to the National Academy of Engineering February 8, 2016 Applied physicist honored for his contributions to engineering
How cells tick February 2, 2016 New work sheds light on the structure of the cell cycle in bacteria and budding yeast
Making big data a little smaller October 19, 2017 Harvard computer scientist demonstrates 30-year-old theorem still best to reduce data and speed up algorithms
Bridging the terahertz gap October 16, 2017 Optical frequency comb offers a convenient way to generate elusive terahertz frequencies
Shaping animal, vegetable and mineral October 16, 2017 Researchers develop mathematical techniques for designing shape-shifting shells
A platform for stable quantum computing, a playground for exotic physics December 6, 2019 Recent research settles a long-standing debate
Metalens grows up December 3, 2019 Researchers develop a mass-producible, centimeter-scale metalens for VR, imaging
Imagining a world without species September 20, 2017 Applied mathematician rethinks how we differentiate organisms on the microbial scale
Portable, injectable clotting agent could treat trauma victims on the front lines July 31, 2020 Hemostat slows internal bleeding by 97 percent in mice
Harvard researchers develop tough, self-healing rubber August 14, 2017 Potential applications include more durable tires, wearable electronics, medical devices
Safely releasing genetically modified genes into the wild August 1, 2017 Researchers explore how to effectively release and control engineered species
How bacteria maintain and recover their shape July 26, 2017 Mechanical stress may cue shape recovery in bacteria
New faces, new frontiers September 22, 2015 New faculty bring expertise on neural networks, batteries, and the origin of life
Empty “backpacks” activate the immune system against cancer March 18, 2024 Neutrophils bearing polymer microparticles can be harnessed as a drug-free way to shrink tumors
Programmable balloons pave the way for new shape-morphing devices July 7, 2020 Kirigami balloons could be used in medical devices, soft robotics
Researchers develop technique to control and measure electron spin voltage July 13, 2017 New tool may provide insight into spintronic devices and exotic physics