When MIT students walk into the Johnson Athletic Center for fall career fair — or this year, hop onto Zoom — they're greeted with flashy displays from hundreds of employers vying for some of the top tech and engineering students in the world.
articles
No Matter the Size of a Nuclear Party, Some Protons and Neutrons Will Always Pair Up and Dance
Atoms in a gas can seem like partiers at a nanoscopic rave, with particles zipping around, pairing up, and flying off again in seemingly random fashion.
Taking a Measure of Sea Level Rise: Ocean Altimetry
The ocean is lumpy and sloshes around its basins for natural reasons. But it is also rising, slowly and steadily.
One Third of UK Fruit and Vegetables are Imported from Climate-Vulnerable Countries
The UK’s supply of fruit and vegetables has become increasingly reliant on imports from countries vulnerable to climate change, according to a new study in Nature Food.
Taking a Measure of Sea Level Rise: Land Motion
Earth’s surface may seem motionless most of the time, but an array of measurements show that natural and human-caused processes cause coastal land to rise and fall.
Cutting Emissions Makes the North Atlantic the Focus of Ocean Heat Uptake under Global Warming
The Earth is getting warmer at a faster rate than ever, in which oceans play a critical role. 93% of the net energy are absorbed by global ocean surface in the form of the Ocean Heat Uptake (OHU), which is the key factor modulating the rate of global warming.