Search Results Search (-) All (2573) Courses (3) Events (13) Mission in Action (1) News (2506) People (35) Teaching areas (15) Getting the scoop on ice cream December 11, 2019 Annual holiday lecture highlights the sweet science of this favorite dessert The trouble with thaw April 16, 2019 The warming Arctic permafrost may be releasing more nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas, than previously thought Michael O. Rabin wins Dan David Prize February 17, 2010 Computer science pioneer shares $1 million prize for outstanding achievements in the field Researchers discover the cause of irradiation-induced instability in materials surfaces April 12, 2011 Key insight may help nuclear industry advance clean fusion power Museum exhibit developed at SEAS puts evolution at visitors' fingertips March 25, 2013 Massively detailed, interactive Tree of Life visualization at Harvard Museum of Natural History illustrates the processes of evolution New device hides, on cue, from infrared cameras November 26, 2012 Tunable material developed at Harvard boasts nearly 100% absorption on demand REEF Makerspace Flatland Light November 4, 2019 Researchers create rewritable optical components for 2D light waves Compact depth sensor inspired by spiders October 28, 2019 Metalens sensor could be used for microrobotics, augmented reality, wearable devices Coding creativity December 13, 2017 Students’ imaginations run wild at CS50 Fair Sensing Parkinson’s symptoms March 28, 2022 Researchers apply exosuit sensors to measure muscle strain Alumni profile: Kitty Yeung, Ph.D. ’15 November 28, 2017 Fashion technologist works where art and physics collide Scientists expect wildfires to increase as climate warms in the coming decades July 29, 2009 Resulting smoke and other particles from more fires could diminish air quality Urban areas across the U.S. are undercounting greenhouse gas emissions October 25, 2021 Methane emissions from natural gas is six times higher in Boston than previous estimates Seasonal CO2 range expanding as more is added to the atmosphere August 8, 2013 Northern Hemisphere terrestrial ecosystems are taking “deeper breaths,” according to a multi-agency study For electronics beyond silicon, a new contender emerges September 16, 2014 New transistor achieves ‘colossal’ switchable resistance using quantum materials and physics developed in a fuel cell lab Alumni profile: Kristen Sunter, S.M. ’06, Ph.D. ’14 September 5, 2018 Office of Finance - Current Use Gift Process & Administration Wool-like material can remember and change shape September 3, 2020 Material could be used in smart textiles, medical devices and more Crystal clear August 19, 2021 Research reveals fundamental mechanism of colloid crystal growth, opens door to new applications Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 130 Page 131 Current page 132 Page 133 Page 134 … Page 141 141 Page 142 142 Next page › Last page »
Getting the scoop on ice cream December 11, 2019 Annual holiday lecture highlights the sweet science of this favorite dessert
The trouble with thaw April 16, 2019 The warming Arctic permafrost may be releasing more nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas, than previously thought
Michael O. Rabin wins Dan David Prize February 17, 2010 Computer science pioneer shares $1 million prize for outstanding achievements in the field
Researchers discover the cause of irradiation-induced instability in materials surfaces April 12, 2011 Key insight may help nuclear industry advance clean fusion power
Museum exhibit developed at SEAS puts evolution at visitors' fingertips March 25, 2013 Massively detailed, interactive Tree of Life visualization at Harvard Museum of Natural History illustrates the processes of evolution
New device hides, on cue, from infrared cameras November 26, 2012 Tunable material developed at Harvard boasts nearly 100% absorption on demand
Compact depth sensor inspired by spiders October 28, 2019 Metalens sensor could be used for microrobotics, augmented reality, wearable devices
Sensing Parkinson’s symptoms March 28, 2022 Researchers apply exosuit sensors to measure muscle strain
Alumni profile: Kitty Yeung, Ph.D. ’15 November 28, 2017 Fashion technologist works where art and physics collide
Scientists expect wildfires to increase as climate warms in the coming decades July 29, 2009 Resulting smoke and other particles from more fires could diminish air quality
Urban areas across the U.S. are undercounting greenhouse gas emissions October 25, 2021 Methane emissions from natural gas is six times higher in Boston than previous estimates
Seasonal CO2 range expanding as more is added to the atmosphere August 8, 2013 Northern Hemisphere terrestrial ecosystems are taking “deeper breaths,” according to a multi-agency study
For electronics beyond silicon, a new contender emerges September 16, 2014 New transistor achieves ‘colossal’ switchable resistance using quantum materials and physics developed in a fuel cell lab
Wool-like material can remember and change shape September 3, 2020 Material could be used in smart textiles, medical devices and more
Crystal clear August 19, 2021 Research reveals fundamental mechanism of colloid crystal growth, opens door to new applications