Subscribe to our Newsletter

Taking on climate change, Rad Lab style

And once I arrived, I heard the same sentiment, framed in local terms: “Can you please help us organize ourselves to help fix the climate?”  Everyone understood that MIT brought tremendous strength... Read more »

Raman to go

“The problem with spectrometers is that they have this intrinsic trade-off,” Persits says. The more light that goes into the spectrometer itself—specifically, into the color-separating diffraction grating and the detector—the harder it... Read more »

A walking antidote to political cynicism

He credits his success in part to being “really good at the boring technical stuff,” as he puts it. “I write my own policy and I go through all the details of... Read more »

“I wanted to work on something that didn’t exist”

Mice “would normally eat ferociously” when given access to food after fasting. “But if you stimulate those cells in the gut, they would feel full.” Together they developed a way to distribute... Read more »

This solar giant is moving manufacturing back to the US

To understand the chances that the US will succeed, MIT Technology Review spoke to Shawn Qu. As the founder and chairman of Canadian Solar, one of the largest and longest-standing solar manufacturing... Read more »

The Download: the future of geoengineering, and how to make stronger, lighter materials

—Daniele Visioni is a climate scientist and assistant professor at Cornell University The public debate over whether we should consider intentionally altering the climate system is heating up, as the dangers of... Read more »

Three things we learned about AI from EmTech Digital London

Join us for EmTech Digital at the MIT campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 22-23, 2024. I’ll be there—join me!  Our fantastic speakers include Nick Clegg, president of global affairs at Meta, who will... Read more »

Why new proposals to restrict geoengineering are misguided

The growing interest in studying the potential of these tools, particularly through small-scale outdoor experiments, has triggered corresponding calls to shut down the research field, or at least to restrict it more... Read more »

This architect is cutting up materials to make them stronger and lighter

To develop Spin-Valence, a novel structural system, Emily Baker created prototypes by making cuts and folds in sheets of paper before shifting to digitally cut steel. By making a series of cuts... Read more »

A Grammy for Miguel Zenón

Nobel Prizes and other scientific honors are nearly routine at MIT, but a Grammy Award is something we don’t see every year. That’s what Miguel Zenón, an assistant professor of music and... Read more »