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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 28, 2022

MIT Policy Hackathon produces new solutions for technology policy challenge...

MIT News
Some of the IDSS students who organized the MIT Policy Hackathon are (from left to right): Deepika Raman, Adrien Concordel, Jorge Sandoval, Aurora Zhang, Pragya Neupane, and Nirmal Bhatt.
PostNovember 28, 2022

The task of magnetic classification suddenly looks easier

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
Left to right: Harry Heiberger, Tongtong Liu, Linh Nguyen, and Helena Merker. When Merker, Heiberger, and Nguyen joined the project as first-year students in fall 2020, they were given a sizable challenge: to design a neural network that can predict the magnetic structure of crystalline materials.
PostNovember 28, 2022

Reversing the charge

MIT Energy Initiative
In the future, electric vehicles could boost renewable energy growth by serving as “energy storage on wheels” — charging their batteries from the power grid as they do now, as well as reversing the flow to send power back and provide support services to the grid.
In the MediaNovember 23, 2022

Forbes

Alumna Geeta Sankappanavar founded Akira Impact, an investment firm that directs capital to support the UN Sustainable Development Goals, reports Cheryl Robinson for Forbes. “The firm invests in...
PostNovember 21, 2022

Machinery of the state

MIT News
Associate Professor of Political Science Mai Hassan
In the MediaNovember 21, 2022

Salon

A new study by MIT scientists finds that Earth can self-regulate its temperature thanks to a stabilizing feedback mechanism that works over hundreds of thousands of years, reports Troy Farah for Salon...
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.
Educator GuideNovember 16, 2022

Carbon Offsets and Climate Change Educator Guide

TILclimate Podcast
Two people in the foreground, with an ocean area and many wind turbines in the background.

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