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Climate News at MIT

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Renewable EnergyAtmosphereClear All
PostAugust 21, 2024

MIT engineers’ new theory could improve the design and operation of wind ...

MIT News
MIT engineers’ new theory could improve the way turbine blades and wind farms are designed and how wind turbines are controlled.
PostAugust 14, 2024

MIT researchers use large language models to flag problems in complex syste...

MIT News
The new method could someday help alert technicians to potential problems in equipment like wind turbines or satellites.
PostAugust 2, 2024

Scientists find a human “fingerprint” in the upper troposphere’s incr...

MIT News
In a paper appearing in the journal “Environmental Science and Technology,” MIT scientists report that they detected a clear signal of human influence on upper tropospheric ozone trends in a 17-year satellite record starting in 2005.
PostJuly 29, 2024

Study tracks exposure to air pollution through the day

MIT News
Researchers found people’s exposure to particulate matter 2.5 microns or bigger rises by about 2.4 percent when daily travel patterns are taken into account.
PostJuly 25, 2024

A recipe for zero-emissions fuel: Soda cans, seawater, and caffeine

MIT News
MIT engineers Aly Kombargi (left) and Niko Tsakiris (right) work on a new hydrogen reactor, designed to produce hydrogen gas by mixing aluminum pellets with seawater.
PostJuly 18, 2024

China-based emissions of three potent climate-warming greenhouse gases spik...

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Aluminum production in western China is a major source of PFC-14 and PFC-116 emissions, which contribute to global warming.
PostJuly 17, 2024

Collaborative effort supports an MIT resilient to the impacts of extreme he...

MIT Office of Sustainability
A heat sensor captures data in the Kendall/MIT Open Space.
PostJuly 10, 2024

Shedding Light on Green Claims

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
a market price line chart against a background of wind turbines
PostJuly 8, 2024

Study: Weaker ocean circulation could enhance CO2 buildup in the atmosphere...

MIT News
As the ocean gets weaker, it could release more carbon from the deep ocean into the atmosphere — rather than less, as some have predicted.
PostJune 11, 2024

New computer vision method helps speed up screening of electronic materials...

MIT News
MIT graduate students Eunice Aissi, left, and Alexander Siemenn, have developed a technique that automatically analyzes visual features in printed samples (pictured) to quickly determine key properties of new and promising semiconducting materials.

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