Engineering & Technology
The trouble with Kepler
A malfunction aboard NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope has jeopardized what has been one of the agency’s highest-profile missions, one that has revealed a galaxy rich with planets. The Gazette talked to Astronomy Professor Dimitar Sasselov, one of the mission’s principal investigators, about the implications.
Tags: Alvin Powell, Dimitar Sasselov, Engineering & Technology, Exoplanets, HarvardScience, Hubble-like rescue, Kepler space telescope, life, Milky Way, NASA
Posted in Alvin Powell, Dimitar Sasselov, Engineering & Technology, Exoplanets, HarvardScience, Hubble-like rescue, Kepler space telescope, life, Milky Way, NASA | Comments Off
Robot hands gain a gentler touch
Researchers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences have developed an inexpensive tactile sensor for robotic hands that is sensitive enough to turn a brute machine into a dexterous manipulator.
Tags: Caroline Perry, Engineering & Technology, hands, haptics, Harvard Biorobotics Laboratory, HarvardScience, Leif Jentoft, Office of Technology Development, Robert D. Howe, robotics, Robots, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, tactile sensing, TakkTile, Yaroslav Tenzer
Posted in Caroline Perry, Engineering & Technology, hands, haptics, Harvard Biorobotics Laboratory, HarvardScience, Leif Jentoft, Office of Technology Development, Robert D. Howe, robotics, Robots, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, tactile sensing, TakkTile, Yaroslav Tenzer | Comments Off
Insignificant, with a lousy future
Theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss described a universe with mysterious particles popping in and out of existence, in which the discoveries of dark energy and dark matter have made mankind more insignificant than ever.
Tags: Alvin Powell, Big Bang, Cosmology, Dimitar Sasselov, Engineering & Technology, HarvardScience, Lawrence Krauss, Lizabeth Cohen, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Posted in Alvin Powell, Big Bang, Cosmology, Dimitar Sasselov, Engineering & Technology, HarvardScience, Lawrence Krauss, Lizabeth Cohen, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study | Comments Off
Your own news platform
The information revolution seemed to hit another high gear last week in Boston, leaving authorities on information technology pondering the ramifications.
Tags: Alvin Powell, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Boston Marathon, Cellphone, David Liu, David Weinberger, Engineering & Technology, Internet, Judith Donath, Marathon Bombing, National, National & World Affairs, Twitter
Posted in Alvin Powell, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Boston Marathon, Cellphone, David Liu, David Weinberger, Engineering & Technology, Internet, Judith Donath, Marathon Bombing, National, National & World Affairs, Twitter | Comments Off
Water worlds surface
Astronomers have found a planetary system orbiting the star Kepler-62. This five-planet system has two worlds in the habitable zone — the distance from their star at which they receive enough light and warmth for liquid water to theoretically exist on their surfaces.
Tags: CFA, Dimitar Sasselov, Earth, Engineering & Technology, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, Kepler-62, Lisa Kaltenegger, Ocean, solar system, The Astrophysical Journal, Water
Posted in CFA, Dimitar Sasselov, Earth, Engineering & Technology, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, Kepler-62, Lisa Kaltenegger, Ocean, solar system, The Astrophysical Journal, Water | Comments Off
Putting the stars within reach
Two communications specialists at the Chandra X-Ray Observatory have authored a guide to the universe, aiming to show people around a universe they say belongs to us all.
Tags: Alvin Powell, Astronomy, Book, Chandra X-Ray Observatory, Engineering & Technology, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, Kimberly Arcand, Megan Watzke, Universe
Posted in Alvin Powell, Astronomy, Book, Chandra X-Ray Observatory, Engineering & Technology, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, Kimberly Arcand, Megan Watzke, Universe | Comments Off
Stars align at astronomy reunion
Harvard astronomers past and present gathered in Cambridge Friday (April 5) for the first-ever reunion of the Harvard Astronomy Department.
Tags: Astronomy Department, Astrophysics, Cosmology, Engineering & Technology, exobiology, Exoplanet, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, life, Nobel Prize, reunion, Sheraton Commander
Posted in Astronomy Department, Astrophysics, Cosmology, Engineering & Technology, exobiology, Exoplanet, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, HarvardScience, life, Nobel Prize, reunion, Sheraton Commander | Comments Off
Fine-tuning online education
Andrew Ho, research director of HarvardX and an assistant professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, spoke with the Gazette about a recent study that found that interspersing online lectures with short tests improved student performance.
Tags: Andrew Ho, Daniel Schacter, edX, Engineering & Technology, Graduate School of Education, Harvard, HarvardScience, Harvardx, Online classes, Online education, online teaching, Peter Reuell, Reuell, Teaching
Posted in Andrew Ho, Daniel Schacter, edX, Engineering & Technology, Graduate School of Education, Harvard, HarvardScience, Harvardx, Online classes, Online education, online teaching, Peter Reuell, Reuell, Teaching | Comments Off
Online learning: It’s different
By interspersing online lectures with short tests, student mind-wandering decreased by half, note-taking tripled, and overall retention of the material improved, said Daniel Schacter, the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Psychology, and Karl Szpunar, a postdoctoral fellow in psychology.
Tags: Daniel Schacter, Engineering & Technology, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, FAS, Harvard, HarvardScience, Karl Szpunar, Note-taking, Online classes, Online Learning, Online lectures, Peter Reuell, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Psychology, Retention, Testing
Posted in Daniel Schacter, Engineering & Technology, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, FAS, Harvard, HarvardScience, Karl Szpunar, Note-taking, Online classes, Online Learning, Online lectures, Peter Reuell, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Psychology, Retention, Testing | Comments Off