Hunting neutrinos + tissue engineering + body-cooling tech

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September 19, 2025
Greetings, and happy Friday! Here’s the latest from the MIT community.
 
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Neutrino Hunter
Graduate student Junior Peña has worked alongside leading physicists to design and build a new technology to precisely measure neutrinos, arguably the universe’s most elusive particles. “It’s been incredible watching him take this from a rough idea to a working design,” says Professor Joseph Formaggio.
Top Headlines
New 3D bioprinting technique may improve production of engineered tissue
The method enhances 3D bioprinting capabilities, accelerating process optimization‎ for real-world applications in tissue engineering.
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Biogen groundbreaking stirs optimism in Kendall Square
The gathering of Biogen and MIT employees, business leaders, and public officials celebrated the first building to be constructed at Kendall Common.
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What if your shirt could prevent heat stroke?
Tiffany Yeh ’17 is CEO of Eztia, which offers a water-based polymer gel that, when incorporated into fabric and worn next to the skin, can reduce skin temperature by 18°F.
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#ThisisMIT
In the Media
Around 90% of an earthquake’s energy doesn’t do what you think it does // Gizmodo
MIT researchers created “lab quakes,” miniature versions of earthquakes in a controlled setting, and found that “anywhere between 68 and 98% of the energy goes into generating heat around a quake’s epicenter.” The findings “could help inform the creation of a physical model for earthquake dynamics or seismologists’ efforts to pick out regions most vulnerable to earthquakes.”
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