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Spotlight: Jul 29, 2022

“We believe we’ve opened a new era of wearable imaging,” says Xuanhe Zhao, whose team has designed a stamp-sized ultrasound sticker that can monitor internal organs for 48 hours. “With a few patches on your body, you could see your internal organs.” Watch video

Jul 29, 2022

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COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT

PhD student Emma Gibson is working to improve diagnostic services in Malawi. “We have the tools” to treat diseases like HIV, she says. “But in resource-limited settings, we often lack the money, the staff, and the infrastructure to reach every patient.”

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“Additive manufacturing can make a big difference in the future of space hardware,” says Luis Fernando Velásquez-García, whose team has 3D printed sensors for satellites. Such sensors could help scientists predict the weather or study climate change.

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With the advent of DNA sequencing and other techniques, computational biologist Bonnie Berger is using computer science and mathematics to tease insights from a deluge of biological information. The theme of her work, she says, is “data, data, data.”

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A material called cubic boron arsenide may be the best semiconductor ever found, researchers say. A new study shows it has some major advantages over silicon, the workhorse of technologies from solar cells to computer chips.

#THISISMIT

Via @mitathletics on Instagram: “Congratulations to the 36 members of @girlsintheboat who were named to the @patriotleague Academic Honor Roll on Monday!”