Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • About
  • Research
  • People
  • Partners
  • Transitions
  • News
  • Access & Equipment
  • Intranet

Search the ISN Site

Main navigation

  • About
  • Research
  • People
  • Partners
  • Transitions
  • News
  • Access & Equipment
  • Intranet

Search the ISN Site

Update as of 10.4.23
ISN PI Prof. Moungi Bawendi shares the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Moungi Bawendi, MIT's Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry, has been named as a 2023 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Bawendi has been an ISN principal investigator since our 2002 founding.

Read More

ISN in the News

ISN research is at the forefront of not only military S&T, but also of scientific inquiry as a whole. As a result, our work is continually making news. The articles below, which are linked to their original outside sources, are a small sampling of the most recent examples.
Moungi Bawendi, the Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry at MIT, photographed in front of his home. (Photo: Jodi Hilton)

Prof. Moungi Bawendi Shares the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (MIT News)

Read More
MIT researchers introduce Lightning, a reconfigurable photonic-electronic smartNIC that serves real-time deep neural network inference requests at 100 Gbps. (Image: Alex Shipps/MIT CSAIL via Midjourney)

System combines light and electrons to unlock faster, greener computing (MIT News)

Read More
A square, patterned sensor is shown next to a quarter for scale.

New sensor mimics cell membrane functions (MIT News)

Read More

Prof. Mathias Kolle: Coloring outside the lines (MIT News)

Read More

Controlling Quantum Randomness from the Vacuum (MIT Physics)

Read More

Unraveling connections between the brain and gut (MIT News)

Read More

Paula Hammond wins 2023–2024 Killian Award for Faculty Achievement (MIT News)

Read More

MIT engineers “grow” atomically thin transistors on top of computer chips (MIT News)

Read More

Two-component system could offer a new way to halt internal bleeding (MIT News)

Read More

Marin Soljačić wins Optica's Max Born Award for 2023

Read More

Making nanoparticle building blocks for new materials (MIT News)

Read More

Strengthening electron-triggered light emission (MIT News)

Read More

Yellow off-road lights work. Here’s why. (The Drive)

Read More

MIT engineers develop a low-cost terahertz camera (MIT News)

Read More

In nanotube science, is boron nitride the new carbon? (MIT News)

Read More
  • Load More

World-class research. Cutting-edge technologies.

Research
People
Partners
Transitions
News
Access
Intranet

Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
500 Technology Square, 4th Floor, Cambridge, MA 02139

Footer

  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility