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

Climate News at MIT

The latest climate change research and action happening in and around MIT.

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PostApril 8, 2022

Leveraging science and technology against the world’s top problems

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
Forging cross-disciplinary ties and bringing creative people together around a common goal have proven valuable skills as Richard Lester has stepped into positions of ever-greater responsibility at the Institute, including his current role as associate provost.
PostApril 7, 2022

Q&A: Climate Grand Challenges finalists on using data and science to foreca...

MIT News
PostApril 5, 2022

Ocean vital signs

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
Researchers propose launching a fleet of oceangoing drones that would continuously monitor the flux of carbon dioxide between the atmosphere and ocean, helping to inform next-generation visualizations and models of the global carbon cycle.
PostMarch 21, 2022

Finding her way to fusion

Plasma Science and Fusion Center
In the laboratory, Zoe Fisher uses a vacuum chamber to irradiate high-temperature superconductors with protons. It is attached to the particle accelerator — DANTE.
PostMarch 10, 2022

Study: Ice flow is more sensitive to stress than previously thought

MIT News
The rate of glacier ice flow is more sensitive to stress than previously calculated, according to a new study by MIT researchers that upends a decades’ old equation used to describe ice flow. Pictured is the Juneau ice field in Alaska.
PostFebruary 25, 2022

MIT entrepreneurs think globally, act locally

MIT News
Left to right: Colonel Arsenio Soto Soto (DR Navy), MechE alumnus Folkers Rojas, MBA candidate Andrés Bisonó León, MechE alumnus Luke Gray, and Professor Alex Slocum at the SOS Carbon full-scale pilot at the Las Calderas Navy base at Bani in the Dominican Republic, in 2019.
PostFebruary 23, 2022

Mapping the depths of plasma physics

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
Assistant Professor Jack Hare studies plasma, a high-energy gas in which atomic nuclei and electrons roam around separately.
PostFebruary 17, 2022

Advancing public understanding of sea-level rise

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
A new exhibit at the Museum of Science, Boston focuses on the effects of sea-level rise around the world. It benefits from the work of MIT Professor Emerita Paola Malanotte-Rizzoli, whose work on the Venetian Lagoon’s MOSE barrier project helped inform the exhibit. Seen here: aerial footage of St. Mark's Square, created through the use of 3D scans and images.
PostJanuary 20, 2022

The radical intervention that might save the “doomsday” glacier

MIT Technology Review
Glacier breaking off into ocean
PostJanuary 5, 2022

Seeing the plasma edge of fusion experiments in new ways with artificial in...

Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Visualized are two-dimensional pressure fluctuations within a larger three-dimensional magnetically confined fusion plasma simulation. With recent advances in machine-learning techniques, these types of partial observations provide new ways to test reduced turbulence models in both theory and experiment.

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