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Students gather around a display of a coral reef at an MIT event

Climate News at MIT

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PostNovember 21, 2022

Machinery of the state

MIT News
Associate Professor of Political Science Mai Hassan
PostNovember 18, 2022

Engineers solve a mystery on the path to smaller, lighter batteries

MIT News
Researchers solved a problem facing solid-state lithium batteries, which can be shorted out by metal filaments called dendrites that cross the gap between metal electrodes. They found that applying a compression force across a solid electrolyte material (gray disk) caused the dendrite (dark line at left) to stop moving from one electrode toward the other (the round metallic patches at each side) and instead veer harmlessly sideways, toward the direction of the force.
PostNovember 17, 2022

On batteries, teaching, and world peace

MIT News
Donald Sadoway is retiring after more than four decades at MIT.
PostNovember 16, 2022

Earth can regulate its own temperature over millennia, new study finds

MIT News
A study by MIT researchers confirms that the planet harbors a “stabilizing feedback” mechanism that acts over hundreds of thousands of years to pull the climate back from the brink, keeping global temperatures within a steady, habitable range.
PostNovember 15, 2022

Nonabah Lane, Navajo educator and environmental sustainability specialist w...

MIT News
Nonabah Lane was an MIT Media Lab Director’s Fellow; MIT Solve 2019 Indigenous Communities Fellow; Department of Urban Studies and Planning guest lecturer and community partner; community partner with the PKG Public Service Center, Terrascope, and D-Lab; as well as a 2022 MIT Energy Week speaker.
PostNovember 15, 2022

3 Questions: Robert Stoner unpacks US climate and infrastructure laws

MIT Energy Initiative
Robert Stoner (left) is the deputy director of science and technology at the MIT Energy Initiative and the founding director of the MIT Tata Center for Technology and Design. He is also a member of the Global Commission to End Energy Poverty, serving as its secretary.
PostNovember 15, 2022

Five Myths About Carbon Pricing

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PostNovember 14, 2022

With new heat treatment, 3D-printed metals can withstand extreme conditions...

MIT News
A thin rod of 3D-printed superalloy is drawn out of a water bath, and through an induction coil, where it is heated to temperatures that transform its microstructure, making the material more resilient. The new MIT heat treatment could be used to reinforce 3D-printed gas turbine blades.
PostNovember 10, 2022

MIT PhD students shed light on important water and food research

MIT News
2022 J-WAFS Fellows (top row, left to right) Devashish Gokhale, Katharina Fransen, and James Zhang; (bottom row, left to right) Linzixuan (Rhoda) Zhang and Aditya Ghodgaonkar.
PostNovember 4, 2022

New materials could enable longer-lasting implantable batteries

MIT News
Time-lapse series of images shows the new type of battery becoming fully discharged over a period of days. In the process of discharging, the new "catholyte" material in the battery cell gets chemically coverted into a reddish compound, so the color gets darker the more it discharges.

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