Search Results Search (-) All (2576) Courses (3) Events (13) Mission in Action (1) News (2509) People (35) Teaching areas (15) Shape-shifting sheets automatically fold into multiple shapes June 29, 2010 Relying on origami techniques, researchers show programmable matter folding into a boat- or plane-shape Office of Finance - Assessments Walsh to advance wearable robot design September 11, 2014 Harvard’s Wyss Institute awarded DARPA contract to further develop Soft Exosuit Climate change may not expand drylands March 11, 2021 New analysis highlights uncertainty about the future state of drylands The metalens meets the stars January 17, 2024 Large, all-glass metalens images sun, moon and nebulae Alumni profile: Ben Dickensheets, S.B. ’15 November 20, 2018 Building a robot, developing a nation September 5, 2017 Harvard undergrad mentors inaugural Zambian robotics team Team moves from stem cells to functioning strip of heart muscle October 16, 2009 Engineering feat is a giant step toward the possibility of using human stem cells to repair damaged hearts Novel non-stick material joins portfolio of slippery surface technologies February 10, 2015 Infusing liquids into polymers makes long lasting, self-replenishing material that repels deadly bacterial build-up The physical intelligence of ant and robot collectives December 19, 2022 How ants and robots pull-off a prison escape without a plan or a planner Applied mathematicians in Namibia April 17, 2018 What can termites teach us about designing green buildings? As it turns out, a lot. A leap forward for terahertz lasers January 25, 2022 New laser could be used for applications in imaging, security, or communications Grad student profile: Eleni Dovrou February 3, 2020 This environmental scientist seeks a clearer picture of cloudy atmospheric chemicals Senior project spotlight: Ariann Jones April 21, 2023 A quick-assembly device to stop femoral hemorrhages Making an impact April 8, 2019 Seniors solve real-life problems in capstone engineering course Delivering drugs on cue June 23, 2014 Harvard team uses ultrasound and self-healing hydrogels to noninvasively deliver drugs at the right place and the right time ‘Heart disease-on-a-chip’ advances tissue engineering May 12, 2014 Stem cell research helps cross-Harvard collaborators mine prospects for personalized medicine Senior project spotlight: Sydney Kepler April 17, 2023 Understanding heart disease by studying the stiffening of arterial vessel walls Despite Major Progress Nationally, Two Mercury Emissions Hotspots Remain June 6, 2023 Study finds socioeconomic disparity in who breathes the most toxic air Inside the cell, an ocean of buffeting waves August 14, 2014 New understanding of the cytoplasm suggests active processes generate crucial forces Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 82 Page 83 Current page 84 Page 85 Page 86 … Page 141 141 Page 142 142 Next page › Last page »
Shape-shifting sheets automatically fold into multiple shapes June 29, 2010 Relying on origami techniques, researchers show programmable matter folding into a boat- or plane-shape
Walsh to advance wearable robot design September 11, 2014 Harvard’s Wyss Institute awarded DARPA contract to further develop Soft Exosuit
Climate change may not expand drylands March 11, 2021 New analysis highlights uncertainty about the future state of drylands
Building a robot, developing a nation September 5, 2017 Harvard undergrad mentors inaugural Zambian robotics team
Team moves from stem cells to functioning strip of heart muscle October 16, 2009 Engineering feat is a giant step toward the possibility of using human stem cells to repair damaged hearts
Novel non-stick material joins portfolio of slippery surface technologies February 10, 2015 Infusing liquids into polymers makes long lasting, self-replenishing material that repels deadly bacterial build-up
The physical intelligence of ant and robot collectives December 19, 2022 How ants and robots pull-off a prison escape without a plan or a planner
Applied mathematicians in Namibia April 17, 2018 What can termites teach us about designing green buildings? As it turns out, a lot.
A leap forward for terahertz lasers January 25, 2022 New laser could be used for applications in imaging, security, or communications
Grad student profile: Eleni Dovrou February 3, 2020 This environmental scientist seeks a clearer picture of cloudy atmospheric chemicals
Senior project spotlight: Ariann Jones April 21, 2023 A quick-assembly device to stop femoral hemorrhages
Delivering drugs on cue June 23, 2014 Harvard team uses ultrasound and self-healing hydrogels to noninvasively deliver drugs at the right place and the right time
‘Heart disease-on-a-chip’ advances tissue engineering May 12, 2014 Stem cell research helps cross-Harvard collaborators mine prospects for personalized medicine
Senior project spotlight: Sydney Kepler April 17, 2023 Understanding heart disease by studying the stiffening of arterial vessel walls
Despite Major Progress Nationally, Two Mercury Emissions Hotspots Remain June 6, 2023 Study finds socioeconomic disparity in who breathes the most toxic air
Inside the cell, an ocean of buffeting waves August 14, 2014 New understanding of the cytoplasm suggests active processes generate crucial forces