NewsDiscovery of New Lobster Species Calls for Revision of Current Classificationby Harvard UniversityNew study of deep-sea squat lobsters combines molecular data and microCT to demonstrate a wide species distribution
NewsTowards More Efficient Catalystsby Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied SciencesResearchers expand ways to improve the selectivity of catalytic reactions
NewsRubber That Doesn’t Grow Cracks When Stretched Many Timesby Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied SciencesMulti-scale approach improves the fatigue threshold of particle-reinforced rubber
ArticleThis Trailblazer Shattered Barriers to Deep-Sea Explorationby Rachel Brown, MScSylvia Earle, PhD, left an indelible mark on oceanography and deep-sea research by pushing the limits of possibility
NewsStudent-Developed Innovation Could Improve Lab Safety at Harvardby Harvard UniversityA team of John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) students produced a tech-driven solution that could help EH&S more efficiently catalogue Harvard’s hazardous chemicals
NewsFlight of the RoboBeeby National Science FoundationLong-term NSF support for Harvard University researchers helps develop unique flying micro-robots
NewsHarvard Lab Develops First Insect-Size Robots Capable of Flight and Swimmingby Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied SciencesWork eases the way to create future aerial-aquatic robotic vehicles
NewsNew On-Chip Frequency Comb Is 100x More Efficientby Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied SciencesDevice opens the door to applications in optical communications, sensing, and the search for exoplanets
Ask the ExpertBogdan Budnik on Trends in Mass-Spectrometry-Driven Proteomicsby Tanuja Koppal, PhDBogdan Budnik, PhD, is director of proteomics at the Harvard University Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Resource Laboratory
News'Liquid Fingerprinting' Technique Instantly Identifies Unknown Liquidsby Harvard UniversityUnlike other techniques for identifying and authenticating liquids, Harvard's solution is inexpensive, instantaneous, and portable