All-Terrain Robots |
|
|
|
A new system from MIT CSAIL allows quadruped robots to dribble a soccer ball in sand, gravel, mud, or snow, using reinforcement learning to adapt to varying dynamics. Such robots could outperform wheeled robots on uneven terrain, such as in disaster recovery.
|
|
Scientists use computational modeling to design “ultrastable” materials
These highly stable metal-organic frameworks could be useful for applications such as capturing greenhouse gases.
|
|
|
|
|
Greening roofs to boost climate resilience
Roofscapes, a startup founded by three MIT students, is planning to build green spaces on pitched roofs in Paris, to decrease temperatures while improving quality of life.
|
|
|
|
|
Blanche Staton: A transformational leader at MIT
Set to retire this spring, Staton has made an indelible mark on graduate student living and learning over a quarter century at the Institute.
|
|
|
|
|
Brazil teams up with MIT Sloan affiliates to combat the retirement crisis
The nation has launched a new retirement bond adapted from the work of Professor Robert Merton and Arun Muralidhar PhD ’92.
|
|
|
|
|
Remembering Mel King, adjunct professor emeritus in urban studies and planning
Beloved mentor and colleague, who died at 94 on March 28, leaves behind a profound legacy at MIT, in Boston, and beyond.
|
|
|
|
|
Your electric bill shouldn’t be so high. Here’s how to fix it // The Boston Globe
“State law requires Massachusetts to cut greenhouse gas emissions relative to 1990 levels by 50 percent by 2030 and by 85 percent by 2050,” writes Professor Christopher Knittel.
|
|
|
|
How’s your city doing? Ask the honeybees // Bloomberg
MIT researchers co-authored a paper in which they used honeybees to study the microbiome of cities.
|
|
|
|
“Insurance is sexy.” Discuss. // Freakonomics Radio
Professor Amy Finkelstein delves into why insurance markets are broken, how they can be fixed, and her new book, “Risky Business.”
|
|
|
|
Virginia Norwood, pioneered Earth imagery as “mother of Landsat,” dies at 96 // The Washington Post
Virginia Norwood ’47, “a pioneering aerospace engineer who used design innovations, emerging technologies and seasoned intuition in projects that scanned the lunar surface for safe Apollo landing sites and mapped the Earth from space with digital imagery never before seen,” has died at 96.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The MIT Climate Portal serves as a useful resource on the science of climate change. Easy-to-digest primers, explainers, and podcasts introduce visitors to both what we know about climate change and what scientists and engineers at MIT and elsewhere are doing about it. As we begin Earth Month, take a look around — you might learn something extraordinary about how we can address our changing climate!
|
|
|
|
MIT students took center stage at Fenway Park this week as they were honored by the Red Sox for their athletic achievements. On a bright Sunday afternoon, the men’s cross country team, who were crowned NCAA Division III national champions in November, were honored during the Red Sox pregame ceremony prior to their game with the Baltimore Orioles. And Karenna Groff ’22 was recognized Monday during the Red Sox Women’s Celebration Night. Named the 2022 NCAA Woman of the Year for her achievements as an MIT soccer player, Groff threw out the first pitch as the Sox prepared to take on the Pittsburgh Pirates. Roll Tech!
|
|
Lock The Quill is a new podcast from the MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering (MechE) Pappalardo Undergraduate Teaching Laboratories, or Pappalardo Lab for short. In the latest episode, lab director and host Daniel Braunstein chats with Maria Yang, associate dean of engineering at MIT and the Gail E. Kendall (1978) Professor in MechE, to discuss her years as an MIT student, her research in design processes, her work as a leader of the Morningside Academy for Design, and much more. Listen to the episode → |
|
|
|