Today’s Spotlight uses a photograph, by M. Scott Brauer, of Ju Li, a professor in MIT’s departments of materials science and engineering and nuclear science and engineering
Growing up in China as the son of two engineers, Ju Li says he was initially more interested in pure science than in hands‑on engineering. “I was pretty fascinated by theoretical physics when I was a kid,” he recalls.
But in the end, he found a way to combine the theoretical with the practical: studying how atoms and electrons behave and interact in a way that allows him to design new materials from the atomic level on up.
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Growing up in China as the son of two engineers, Ju Li says he was initially more interested in pure science than in hands‑on engineering. “I was pretty fascinated by theoretical physics when I was a kid,” he recalls.
But in the end, he found a way to combine the theoretical with the practical: studying how atoms and electrons behave and interact in a way that allows him to design new materials from the atomic level on up.
Read more
