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Updates from campus: Read the latest from MIT and its leaders regarding events on campus.

Tianchuang Luo, Nuh Gedik, and Alexander von Hoegen
From left to right: graduate student Tianchuang Luo, Professor Nuh Gedik, and postdoc Alexander von Hoegen.

Spotlight: Dec 19, 2024

Physicists have created a new and long-lasting magnetic state in a material, using only light. They used a terahertz laser to stimulate atoms in antiferromagnetic materials, which could advance information processing and memory chip technology.

Dec 19, 2024

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MORE FROM THE MIT COMMUNITY

RESEARCH

Around the world, policies supporting specific sectors are thought to have sparked major growth, but new research suggests static consumer demand limits the overall impact. “It has to be in a world where people want those goods,” Dave Donaldson says.

MIT IN THE WORLD

At D-Lab, students innovate to help solve challenges in communities worldwide. “Students are coming from every major, and we really are providing them with tools to think about interdisciplinary complex problems,” Libby Hsu says.

COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT

Andres Sevtsuk examines how the design of built environments affects daily life within them: The way cities are structured influences whether street-level retail commerce can thrive, how much people walk, and how often they encounter each other.

AROUND CAMPUS

In the vast universe of MIT club sports, thousands of individuals compete for the love of the game. A complement to 33 intercollegiate varsity sports, MIT’s 34 club sports range from archery, badminton, and cricket to triathlon and ultimate frisbee.

MIT INNOVATORS

Students strove for “Balance!” in a lively product showcase: New products presented at the 2.009 prototype launch included a crash-detecting bicycle helmet, an augmented reality mask for divers, and a respirator for wildland firefighters.

RESEARCH

Using high-powered lasers, a new noninvasive imaging method can penetrate deeper into living tissue. This approach to metabolic imaging could help biologists study the body’s immune responses and develop new medicines.