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研究者・留学生向け英文メールニュース 「Tokyo Tech Bulletin No. 48」を配信

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Tokyo Tech Bulletin(トーキョー テック ブリテン)」は、東京工業大学の研究成果やニュース記事、学生の活動などを紹介し国内外へ広く配信する英文メールニュースです。

この度、Tokyo Tech Bulletin No. 48が発行されました。

メールでの配信をご希望の方は申込フォームからご登録ください。

SPECIAL TOPICS

Takako Yoshida - Exploring the harmony of humans, robots, and AI

Takako Yoshida - Exploring the harmony of humans, robots, and AI

Advances in robotics and AI have led to an integration and expansion of interactions between humans and robots. With this, concerns regarding safety, usability, controllability and liability have also arisen. Takako Yoshida studies these issues from the perspectives of psychology and mechanical engineering.

Why I chose Tokyo Tech

Why I chose Tokyo Tech

International students discuss their experiences at Tokyo Tech, their advice for prospective students, and their plans for the future.

Research

Solar energy: Mixed anion compounds with 'fluorine' work as new photocatalytic material

Solar energy: Mixed anion compounds with 'fluorine' work as new photocatalytic material

Scientists in Japan have shown that an oxyfluoride is capable of visible light-driven photocatalysis. The finding opens new doors for designing materials for artificial photosynthesis and solar energy research.

Ultra high-speed IC capable of wireless transmission of 100 gigabits per second in a 300 GHz band

Ultra high-speed IC capable of wireless transmission of 100 gigabits per second in a 300 GHz band

NTT and Tokyo Tech have jointly developed an ultra high-speed IC for wireless front-end that operates on a terahertz frequency band, and in the 300 GHz band they have succeeded in developing the world's fastest 100 gigabit per second wireless transmission data rate.

Goodbye 'stress granules': Study expands possibilities for treating neurological diseases

Goodbye 'stress granules': Study expands possibilities for treating neurological diseases

Cell biologists have deepened understanding of proteins associated with neurodegenerative diseases. The findings could open up new treatment approaches for disorders including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), among others.

Messy Chemistry: A New Way to Approach the Origins of Life

Messy Chemistry: A New Way to Approach the Origins of Life

In a lab on Ookayama campus, things are getting "messy". Irena Mamajanov (Earth-Life Science Institute - ELSI PI of Tokyo Tech) and Kuhan Chandru (previously ELSI Researcher - now, at University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague). Mamajanov leads an effort at the institute to study a new "messy" path to understanding how some prebiotic chemical systems led to building blocks of life on early Earth.

In the spotlight

Tokyo Tech Bulletinは英語で配信を行っていますが、コンテンツは一部を除いてすべて日英両方で掲載しています。

お問い合わせ先

広報・地域連携部門

E-mail : publication@jim.titech.ac.jp


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