Search Results Search (-) All (2573) Courses (3) Events (13) Mission in Action (1) News (2506) People (35) Teaching areas (15) In motor learning, it's actions, not intentions, that count June 23, 2011 Research from Harvard’s Neuromotor Control Lab contradicts a common assumption about how the body learns to make accurate movements Unhealthy ozone days could increase by more than a week in coming decades April 21, 2016 The complex relationship between heat and ozone Carbon-fiber epoxy honeycombs mimic the material performance of balsa wood June 25, 2014 Harvard engineers use new resin inks and 3D printing to construct lightweight cellular composites Engineering solutions target deadly disparity January 8, 2018 Class project seeks to improve pediatric cancer survival rates in low- and middle-income countries Federico Capasso to receive Gold Medal, highest honor of SPIE April 23, 2013 Award recognizes his exceptional contributions to optics and photonics Hands on: Crafting ultrathin color coatings December 22, 2014 In Harvard’s high-tech cleanroom, applied physicists produce vivid optical effects—on paper Artificial jellyfish swims in a heartbeat July 22, 2012 Creation is an amalgam of silicone polymer and heart muscle cells Jackson Pollock, artist and physicist? June 28, 2011 Mathematical analysis of Pollock's work highlights the artist's deliberateness and delight in natural phenomena Understanding pollution in a pristine rainforest February 26, 2014 D.O.E. project in the Amazon Basin will study human impacts on tropical rainforest and climate Alumni profile: Anna Galea, Ph.D. ’03 November 27, 2018 Q&A with Martha Heitzmann '97 (Ph.D.) June 6, 2011 A self-described “hybrid,” Heitzmann straddles cultures and disciplines to address the world’s energy crisis "Warming hole" delayed climate change over eastern United States April 26, 2012 50-year model suggests regional pollution obscured a global trend Seeking structural color, engineers find it glinting in the sea February 26, 2015 Harvard and MIT researchers identify optical features in seashells that may inspire responsive, transparent displays Imperiled information January 17, 2020 Students find website data leaks pose greater risks than most people realize 2010-11: The year in review May 24, 2011 Highlights from a year of innovative teaching, breakthrough research, inventive student projects, and global impact How the lily blooms March 21, 2011 Harvard mathematicians reveal that ruffling at the edge of each petal drives the delicate flower to open, contradicting common theories of blooming Multimaterial 3D printing manufactures complex objects, fast November 13, 2019 Multinozzle printer can switch between multiple inks up to 50 times per second Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) January 18, 2011 "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer A conjecture for a better Turing test August 31, 2012 Barbara J. Grosz suggests a new, more modern philosophical standard for artificial intelligence (The Atlantic) A precise chemical fingerprint of the Amazon September 11, 2019 Drone-based monitoring system reveals important information on the health of the Amazon Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 132 Page 133 Current page 134 Page 135 Page 136 … Page 141 141 Page 142 142 Next page › Last page »
In motor learning, it's actions, not intentions, that count June 23, 2011 Research from Harvard’s Neuromotor Control Lab contradicts a common assumption about how the body learns to make accurate movements
Unhealthy ozone days could increase by more than a week in coming decades April 21, 2016 The complex relationship between heat and ozone
Carbon-fiber epoxy honeycombs mimic the material performance of balsa wood June 25, 2014 Harvard engineers use new resin inks and 3D printing to construct lightweight cellular composites
Engineering solutions target deadly disparity January 8, 2018 Class project seeks to improve pediatric cancer survival rates in low- and middle-income countries
Federico Capasso to receive Gold Medal, highest honor of SPIE April 23, 2013 Award recognizes his exceptional contributions to optics and photonics
Hands on: Crafting ultrathin color coatings December 22, 2014 In Harvard’s high-tech cleanroom, applied physicists produce vivid optical effects—on paper
Artificial jellyfish swims in a heartbeat July 22, 2012 Creation is an amalgam of silicone polymer and heart muscle cells
Jackson Pollock, artist and physicist? June 28, 2011 Mathematical analysis of Pollock's work highlights the artist's deliberateness and delight in natural phenomena
Understanding pollution in a pristine rainforest February 26, 2014 D.O.E. project in the Amazon Basin will study human impacts on tropical rainforest and climate
Q&A with Martha Heitzmann '97 (Ph.D.) June 6, 2011 A self-described “hybrid,” Heitzmann straddles cultures and disciplines to address the world’s energy crisis
"Warming hole" delayed climate change over eastern United States April 26, 2012 50-year model suggests regional pollution obscured a global trend
Seeking structural color, engineers find it glinting in the sea February 26, 2015 Harvard and MIT researchers identify optical features in seashells that may inspire responsive, transparent displays
Imperiled information January 17, 2020 Students find website data leaks pose greater risks than most people realize
2010-11: The year in review May 24, 2011 Highlights from a year of innovative teaching, breakthrough research, inventive student projects, and global impact
How the lily blooms March 21, 2011 Harvard mathematicians reveal that ruffling at the edge of each petal drives the delicate flower to open, contradicting common theories of blooming
Multimaterial 3D printing manufactures complex objects, fast November 13, 2019 Multinozzle printer can switch between multiple inks up to 50 times per second
Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) January 18, 2011 "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer
A conjecture for a better Turing test August 31, 2012 Barbara J. Grosz suggests a new, more modern philosophical standard for artificial intelligence (The Atlantic)
A precise chemical fingerprint of the Amazon September 11, 2019 Drone-based monitoring system reveals important information on the health of the Amazon