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Climate News at MIT

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VideoDecember 23, 2020

MIT-ESI Rapid Response Group Hosts Panel for Congressional Staffers on Key ...

MIT ESI Rapid Response Group
PostDecember 22, 2020

MIT in the media: 2020 in review

MIT News
PostDecember 18, 2020

Making smart thermostats more efficient

MIT News
A diagram from a new paper describing a smart thermostat shows the interaction of weather conditions, control systems, sensors, and learning algorithms to optimize microclimates in buildings.
PostDecember 18, 2020

2020 MIT Water Summit brings international audiences together to discuss re...

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)
Students and researchers from across MIT and industry gathered virtually to discuss a variety of water issues with a focus on resilience, sustainability, and equity. Featured speakers Emma Robbins (top center), Uma Lele (bottom left), and Rebecca Farnum (bottom right) are pictured.
PostDecember 18, 2020

With campus as a test bed, climate action starts and continues at MIT

MIT Office of Sustainability
MIT has reduced campus emissions by 24 percent over the past five years.
PostDecember 17, 2020

To boost emissions reductions from electric vehicles, know when to charge

MIT Energy Initiative
The time of day when an electric vehicle (EV) is charged can have a large impact on reducing its emissions. In California, home to half of the EVs in the United States, charging at midday reduces EV emissions by more than 40 percent when compared to charging at night.
PostDecember 17, 2020

Want cheaper nuclear energy? Turn the design process into a game

MIT News
In this AI-designed layout for a boiling water reactor, fuel rods in the assembly are ideally positioned around two fixed water rods to burn more efficiently. MIT researchers ran the equivalent of 36,000 simulations to find the optimal configuration, which could extend the life of the rods in an assembly by about 5 percent, generating $3 million in savings per year if scaled to the full reactor. Colors correspond to varying amounts of uranium and gadolinium oxide in each rod.
PostDecember 16, 2020

A Machine Learning Approach to Evaluating Renewable Energy Technology: An A...

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PodcastDecember 14, 2020

Building technology

MIT Energy Initiative
PostDecember 11, 2020

A cool advance in thermoelectric conversion

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
In a topological Weyl semimetal, the electronic properties are controlled by Weyl fermions, which do not possess any mass and to some extent resemble photons. When an external magnetic field is applied, these Weyl fermions are able to convert waste heat into electricity extremely effectively and efficiently.

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