Our group member Abhijatmedhi has been selected to attend the 26th National School on Neutron and X-ray Scattering, at Argonne National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Labratory. Big congratulations!
News
The device, based on simple tetromino shapes, could determine the direction and distance of a radiation source, with fewer detector pixels.
MIT scientists have tackled key obstacles to bringing 2D magnetic materials into practical use, setting the stage for the next generation of energy-efficient computers.
Our work "Tetris-inspired detector with neural network for radiation mapping", led by our team members Ryotaro, former group member Shangjie, and NSE alumnus Jayson, has been accepted by Nature Communications. Conventional radiation detection often uses a "grid" of detector arrays of pixels, and...
An MIT team precisely controlled an ultrathin magnet at room temperature, which could enable faster, more efficient processors and computer memories.
MIT researchers show how topology can help create magnetism at higher temperatures.
Tongtong successfully defended her PhD Thesis titled "Probing Entanglement and Symmetry Breaking Orders via Spectroscopies and Machine Learning’’. Big Congratulations!
- 1 of 8
- next ›