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A cysteine-rich diet may promote regeneration of the intestinal lining, study suggests

Wed, 10/01/2025 - 11:00am

A diet rich in the amino acid cysteine may have rejuvenating effects in the small intestine, according to a new study from MIT. This amino acid, the researchers discovered, can turn on an immune signaling pathway that helps stem cells to regrow new intestinal tissue.

This enhanced regeneration may help to heal injuries from radiation, which often occur in patients undergoing radiation therapy for cancer. The research was conducted in mice, but if future research shows similar results in humans, then delivering elevated quantities of cysteine, through diet or supplements, could offer a new strategy to help damaged tissue heal faster, the researchers say.

“The study suggests that if we give these patients a cysteine-rich diet or cysteine supplementation, perhaps we can dampen some of the chemotherapy or radiation-induced injury,” says Omer Yilmaz, director of the MIT Stem Cell Initiative, an associate professor of biology at MIT, and a member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research. “The beauty here is we’re not using a synthetic molecule; we’re exploiting a natural dietary compound.”

While previous research has shown that certain types of diets, including low-calorie diets, can enhance intestinal stem cell activity, the new study is the first to identify a single nutrient that can help intestinal cells to regenerate.

Yilmaz is the senior author of the study, which appears today in Nature. Koch Institute postdoc Fangtao Chi is the paper’s lead author.

Boosting regeneration

It is well-established that diet can affect overall health: High-fat diets can lead to obesity, diabetes, and other health problems, while low-calorie diets have been shown to extend lifespans in many species. In recent years, Yilmaz’s lab has investigated how different types of diets influence stem cell regeneration, and found that high-fat diets, as well as short periods of fasting, can enhance stem cell activity in different ways.

“We know that macro diets such as high-sugar diets, high-fat diets, and low-calorie diets have a clear impact on health. But at the granular level, we know much less about how individual nutrients impact stem cell fate decisions, as well as tissue function and overall tissue health,” Yilmaz says.

In their new study, the researchers began by feeding mice a diet high in one of 20 different amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. For each group, they measured how the diet affected intestinal stem cell regeneration. Among these amino acids, cysteine had the most dramatic effects on stem cells and progenitor cells (immature cells that differentiate into adult intestinal cells).

Further studies revealed that cysteine initiates a chain of events leading to the activation of a population of immune cells called CD8 T cells. When cells in the lining of the intestine absorb cysteine from digested food, they convert it into CoA, a cofactor that is released into the mucosal lining of the intestine. There, CD8 T cells absorb CoA, which stimulates them to begin proliferating and producing a cytokine called IL-22.

IL-22 is an important player in the regulation of intestinal stem cell regeneration, but until now, it wasn’t known that CD8 T cells can produce it to boost intestinal stem cells. Once activated, those IL-22-releasing T cells are primed to help combat any kind of injury that could occur within the intestinal lining.

“What’s really exciting here is that feeding mice a cysteine-rich diet leads to the expansion of an immune cell population that we typically don’t associate with IL-22 production and the regulation of intestinal stemness,” Yilmaz says. “What happens in a cysteine-rich diet is that the pool of cells that make IL-22 increases, particularly the CD8 T-cell fraction.”

These T cells tend to congregate within the lining of the intestine, so they are already in position when needed. The researchers found that the stimulation of CD8 T cells occurred primarily in the small intestine, not in any other part of the digestive tract, which they believe is because most of the protein that we consume is absorbed by the small intestine.

Healing the intestine

In this study, the researchers showed that regeneration stimulated by a cysteine-rich diet could help to repair radiation damage to the intestinal lining. Also, in work that has not been published yet, they showed that a high-cysteine diet had a regenerative effect following treatment with a chemotherapy drug called 5-fluorouracil. This drug, which is used to treat colon and pancreatic cancers, can also damage the intestinal lining.

Cysteine is found in many high-protein foods, including meat, dairy products, legumes, and nuts. The body can also synthesize its own cysteine, by converting the amino acid methionine to cysteine — a process that takes place in the liver. However, cysteine produced in the liver is distributed through the entire body and doesn’t lead to a buildup in the small intestine the way that consuming cysteine in the diet does.

“With our high-cysteine diet, the gut is the first place that sees a high amount of cysteine,” Chi says.

Cysteine has been previously shown to have antioxidant effects, which are also beneficial, but this study is the first to demonstrate its effect on intestinal stem cell regeneration. The researchers now hope to study whether it may also help other types of stem cells regenerate new tissues. In one ongoing study, they are investigating whether cysteine might stimulate hair follicle regeneration.

They also plan to further investigate some of the other amino acids that appear to influence stem cell regeneration.

“I think we’re going to uncover multiple new mechanisms for how these amino acids regulate cell fate decisions and gut health in the small intestine and colon,” Yilmaz says.

The research was funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health, the V Foundation, the Koch Institute Frontier Research Program via the Kathy and Curt Marble Cancer Research Fund, the Bridge Project — a partnership between the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT and the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center, the American Federation for Aging Research, the MIT Stem Cell Initiative, and the Koch Institute Support (core) Grant from the National Cancer Institute.

System lets people personalize online social spaces while staying connected with others

Wed, 10/01/2025 - 10:00am

Say a local concert venue wants to engage its community by giving social media followers an easy way to share and comment on new music from emerging artists. Rather than working within the constraints of existing social platforms, the venue might want to create its own social app with the functionality that would be best for its community. But building a new social app from scratch involves many complicated programming steps, and even if the venue can create a customized app, the organization’s followers may be unwilling to join the new platform because it could mean leaving their connections and data behind.

Now, researchers from MIT have launched a framework called Graffiti that makes building personalized social applications easier, while allowing users to migrate between multiple applications without losing their friends or data.

“We want to empower people to have control over their own designs rather than having them dictated from the top down,” says electrical engineering and computer science graduate student Theia Henderson.

Henderson and her colleagues designed Graffiti with a flexible structure so individuals have the freedom to create a variety of customized applications, from messenger apps like WhatsApp to microblogging platforms like X to location-based social networking sites like Nextdoor, all using only front-end development tools like HTML.

The protocol ensures all applications can interoperate, so content posted on one application can appear on any other application, even those with disparate designs or functionality. Importantly, Graffiti users retain control of their data, which is stored on a decentralized infrastructure rather than being held by a specific application.

While the pros and cons of implementing Graffiti at scale remain to be fully explored, the researchers hope this new approach can someday lead to healthier online interactions.

“We’ve shown that you can have a rich social ecosystem where everyone owns their own data and can use whatever applications they want to interact with whoever they want in whatever way they want. And they can have their own experiences without losing connection with the people they want to stay connected with,” says David Karger, professor of EECS and a member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).

Henderson, the lead author, and Karger are joined by MIT Research Scientist David D. Clark on a paper about Graffiti, which will be presented at the ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology.

Personalized, integrated applications

With Graffiti, the researchers had two main goals: to lower the barrier to creating personalized social applications and to enable those personalized applications to interoperate without requiring permission from developers.

To make the design process easier, they built a collective back-end infrastructure that all applications access to store and share content. This means developers don’t need to write any complex server code. Instead, designing a Graffiti application is more like making a website using popular tools like Vue.

Developers can also easily introduce new features and new types of content, giving them more freedom and fostering creativity.

“Graffiti is so straightforward that we used it as the infrastructure for the intro to web design class I teach, and students were able to write the front-end very easily to come up with all sorts of applications,” Karger says.

The open, interoperable nature of Graffiti means no one entity has the power to set a moderation policy for the entire platform. Instead, multiple competing and contradictory moderation services can operate, and people can choose the ones they like. 

Graffiti uses the idea of “total reification,” where every action taken in Graffiti, such as liking, sharing, or blocking a post, is represented and stored as its own piece of data. A user can configure their social application to interpret or ignore those data using its own rules.

For instance, if an application is designed so a certain user is a moderator, posts blocked by that user won’t appear in the application. But for an application with different rules where that person isn’t considered a moderator, other users might just see a warning or no flag at all.

“Theia’s system lets each person pick their own moderators, avoiding the one-sized-fits-all approach to moderation taken by the major social platforms,” Karger says.

But at the same time, having no central moderator means there is no one to remove content from the platform that might be offensive or illegal.

“We need to do more research to understand if that is going to provide real, damaging consequences or if the kind of personal moderation we created can provide the protections people need,” he adds.

Empowering social media users

The researchers also had to overcome a problem known as context collapse, which conflicts with their goal of interoperation.

For instance, context collapse would occur if a person’s Tinder profile appeared on LinkedIn, or if a post intended for one group, like close friends, would create conflict with another group, such as family members. Context collapse can lead to anxiety and have social repercussions for the user and their different communities.

“We realize that interoperability can sometimes be a bad thing. People have boundaries between different social contexts, and we didn’t want to violate those,” Henderson says.

To avoid context collapse, the researchers designed Graffiti so all content is organized into distinct channels. Channels are flexible and can represent a variety of contexts, such as people, applications, locations, etc.

If a user’s post appears in an application channel but not their personal channel, others using that application will see the post, but those who only follow this user will not.

“Individuals should have the power to choose the audience for whatever they want to say,” Karger adds.

The researchers created multiple Graffiti applications to showcase personalization and interoperability, including a community-specific application for a local concert venue, a text-centric microblogging platform patterned off X, a Wikipedia-like application that enables collective editing, and a real-time messaging app with multiple moderation schemes patterned off WhatsApp and Slack.

“It also leaves room to create so many social applications people haven’t thought of yet. I’m really excited to see what people come up with when they are given full creative freedom,” Henderson says.

In the future, she and her colleagues want to explore additional social applications they could build with Graffiti. They also intend to incorporate tools like graphical editors to simplify the design process. In addition, they want to strengthen Graffiti’s security and privacy.

And while there is still a long way to go before Graffiti could be implemented at scale, the researchers are currently running a user study as they explore the potential positive and negative impacts the system could have on the social media landscape. 

MIT cognitive scientists reveal why some sentences stand out from others

Wed, 10/01/2025 - 12:00am

“You still had to prove yourself.”

“Every cloud has a blue lining!”

Which of those sentences are you most likely to remember a few minutes from now? If you guessed the second, you’re probably correct.

According to a new study from MIT cognitive scientists, sentences that stick in your mind longer are those that have distinctive meanings, making them stand out from sentences you’ve previously seen. They found that meaning, not any other trait, is the most important feature when it comes to memorability.

“One might have thought that when you remember sentences, maybe it’s all about the visual features of the sentence, but we found that that was not the case. A big contribution of this paper is pinning down that it is the meaning-related space that makes sentences memorable,” says Greta Tuckute PhD ’25, who is now a research fellow at Harvard University’s Kempner Institute.

The findings support the hypothesis that sentences with distinctive meanings — like “Does olive oil work for tanning?” — are stored in brain space that is not cluttered with sentences that mean almost the same thing. Sentences with similar meanings end up densely packed together and are therefore more difficult to recognize confidently later on, the researchers believe.

“When you encode sentences that have a similar meaning, there’s feature overlap in that space. Therefore, a particular sentence you’ve encoded is not linked to a unique set of features, but rather to a whole bunch of features that may overlap with other sentences,” says Evelina Fedorenko, an MIT associate professor of brain and cognitive sciences (BCS), a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and the senior author of the study.

Tuckute and Thomas Clark, an MIT graduate student, are the lead authors of the paper, which appears in the Journal of Memory and Language. MIT graduate student Bryan Medina is also an author.

Distinctive sentences

What makes certain things more memorable than others is a longstanding question in cognitive science and neuroscience. In a 2011 study, Aude Oliva, now a senior research scientist at MIT and MIT director of the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab, showed that not all items are created equal: Some types of images are much easier to remember than others, and people are remarkably consistent in what images they remember best.

In that study, Oliva and her colleagues found that, in general, images with people in them are the most memorable, followed by images of human-scale space and close-ups of objects. Least memorable are natural landscapes.

As a follow-up to that study, Fedorenko and Oliva, along with Ted Gibson, another faculty member in BCS, teamed up to determine if words also vary in their memorability. In a study published earlier this year, co-led by Tuckute and Kyle Mahowald, a former PhD student in BCS, the researchers found that the most memorable words are those that have the most distinctive meanings.

Words are categorized as being more distinctive if they have a single meaning, and few or no synonyms — for example, words like “pineapple” or “avalanche” which were found to be very memorable. On the other hand, words that can have multiple meanings, such as “light,” or words that have many synonyms, like “happy,” were more difficult for people to recognize accurately.

In the new study, the researchers expanded their scope to analyze the memorability of sentences. Just like words, some sentences have very distinctive meanings, while others communicate similar information in slightly different ways.

To do the study, the researchers assembled a collection of 2,500 sentences drawn from publicly available databases that compile text from novels, news articles, movie dialogues, and other sources. Each sentence that they chose contained exactly six words.

The researchers then presented a random selection of about 1,000 of these sentences to each study participant, including repeats of some sentences. Each of the 500 participants in the study was asked to press a button when they saw a sentence that they remembered seeing earlier.

The most memorable sentences — the ones where participants accurately and quickly indicated that they had seen them before — included strings such as “Homer Simpson is hungry, very hungry,” and “These mosquitoes are — well, guinea pigs.”

Those memorable sentences overlapped significantly with sentences that were determined as having distinctive meanings as estimated through the high-dimensional vector space of a large language model (LLM) known as Sentence BERT. That model is able to generate sentence-level representations of sentences, which can be used for tasks like judging meaning similarity between sentences. This model provided researchers with a distinctness score for each sentence based on its semantic similarity to other sentences.

The researchers also evaluated the sentences using a model that predicts memorability based on the average memorability of the individual words in the sentence. This model performed fairly well at predicting overall sentence memorability, but not as well as Sentence BERT. This suggests that the meaning of a sentence as a whole — above and beyond the contributions from individual words — determines how memorable it will be, the researchers say.

Noisy memories

While cognitive scientists have long hypothesized that the brain’s memory banks have a limited capacity, the findings of the new study support an alternative hypothesis that would help to explain how the brain can continue forming new memories without losing old ones.

This alternative, known as the noisy representation hypothesis, says that when the brain encodes a new memory, be it an image, a word, or a sentence, it is represented in a noisy way — that is, this representation is not identical to the stimulus, and some information is lost. For example, for an image, you may not encode the exact viewing angle at which an object is shown, and for a sentence, you may not remember the exact construction used.

Under this theory, a new sentence would be encoded in a similar part of the memory space as sentences that carry a similar meanings, whether they were encountered recently or sometime across a lifetime of language experience. This jumbling of similar meanings together increases the amount of noise and can make it much harder, later on, to remember the exact sentence you have seen before.

“The representation is gradually going to accumulate some noise. As a result, when you see an image or a sentence for a second time, your accuracy at judging whether you’ve seen it before will be affected, and it’ll be less than 100 percent in most cases,” Clark says.

However, if a sentence has a unique meaning that is encoded in a less densely crowded space, it will be easier to pick out later on.

“Your memory may still be noisy, but your ability to make judgments based on the representations is less affected by that noise because the representation is so distinctive to begin with,” Clark says.

The researchers now plan to study whether other features of sentences, such as more vivid and descriptive language, might also contribute to making them more memorable, and how the language system may interact with the hippocampal memory structures during the encoding and retrieval of memories.

The research was funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health, the McGovern Institute, the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, the Simons Center for the Social Brain, and the MIT Quest Initiative for Intelligence.

3 Questions: How a new mission to Uranus could be just around the corner

Tue, 09/30/2025 - 8:00am

The successful test of SpaceX’s Starship launch vehicle, following a series of engineering challenges and failed launches, has reignited excitement over the possibilities this massive rocket may unlock for humanity’s greatest ambitions in space. The largest rocket ever built, Starship and its 33-engine “super heavy” booster completed a full launch into Earth orbit on Aug. 26, deployed eight test prototype satellites, and survived reentry for a simulated landing before coming down, mostly intact, in the Indian Ocean. The 400-foot rocket is designed to carry up to 150 tons of cargo to low Earth orbit, dramatically increasing potential payload volume from rockets currently in operation. In addition to the planned Artemis III mission to the lunar surface and proposed missions to Mars in the near future, Starship also poses an opportunity for large-scale scientific missions throughout the solar system.

The National Academy of Sciences Planetary Science Decadal Survey published a recommendation in 2022 outlining exploration of Uranus as its highest-priority flagship mission. This proposed mission was envisioned for the 2030s, assuming use of a Falcon Heavy expendable rocket and anticipating arrival at the planet before 2050. Earlier this summer, a paper from researchers in MIT’s Engineering Systems Lab found that Starship may enable this flagship mission to Uranus in half the flight time. 

In this 3Q, Chloe Gentgen, a PhD student in aeronautics and astronautics and co-author on the recent study, describes the significance of Uranus as a flagship mission and what the current trajectory of Starship means for scientific exploration.

Q: Why has Uranus been identified as the highest-priority flagship mission? 

A: Uranus is one of the most intriguing and least-explored planets in our solar system. The planet is tilted on its side, is extremely cold, presents a highly dynamic atmosphere with fast winds, and has an unusual and complex magnetic field. A few of Uranus’ many moons could be ocean worlds, making them potential candidates in the search for life in the solar system. The ice giants Uranus and Neptune also represent the closest match to most of the exoplanets discovered. A mission to Uranus would therefore radically transform our understanding of ice giants, the solar system, and exoplanets. 

What we know about Uranus largely dates back to Voyager 2’s brief flyby nearly 40 years ago. No spacecraft has visited Uranus or Neptune since, making them the only planets yet to have a dedicated orbital mission. One of the main obstacles has been the sheer distance. Uranus is 19 times farther from the sun than the Earth is, and nearly twice as far as Saturn. Reaching it requires a heavy-lift launch vehicle and trajectories involving gravity assists from other planets. 

Today, such heavy-lift launch vehicles are available, and trajectories have been identified for launch windows throughout the 2030s, which resulted in selecting a Uranus mission as the highest priority flagship in the 2022 decadal survey. The proposed concept, called Uranus Orbiter and Probe (UOP), would release a probe into the planet’s atmosphere and then embark on a multiyear tour of the system to study the planet’s interior, atmosphere, magnetosphere, rings, and moons. 

Q: How do you envision your work on the Starship launch vehicle being deployed for further development?

A: Our study assessed the feasibility and potential benefits of launching a mission to Uranus with a Starship refueled in Earth’s orbit, instead of a Falcon Heavy (another SpaceX launch vehicle, currently operational). The Uranus decadal study showed that launching on a Falcon Heavy Expendable results in a cruise time of at least 13 years. Long cruise times present challenges, such as loss of team expertise and a higher operational budget. With the mission not yet underway, we saw an opportunity to evaluate launch vehicles currently in development, particularly Starship. 

When refueled in orbit, Starship could launch a spacecraft directly to Uranus, without detours by other planets for gravity-assist maneuvers. The proposed spacecraft could then arrive at Uranus in just over six years, less than half the time currently envisioned. These high-energy trajectories require significant deceleration at Uranus to capture in orbit. If the spacecraft slows down propulsively, the burn would require 5 km/s of delta v (which quantifies the energy needed for the maneuver), much higher than is typically performed by spacecraft, which might result in a very complex design. A more conservative approach, assuming a maximum burn of 2 km/s at Uranus, would result in a cruise time of 8.5 years. 

An alternative to propulsive orbit insertion at Uranus is aerocapture, where the spacecraft, enclosed in a thermally protective aeroshell, dips into the planet’s atmosphere and uses aerodynamic drag to decelerate. We examined whether Starship itself could perform aerocapture, rather than being separated from the spacecraft shortly after launch. Starship is already designed to withstand atmospheric entry at Earth and Mars, and thus already has a thermal protection system that could, potentially, be modified for aerocapture at Uranus. While bringing a Starship vehicle all the way to Uranus presents significant challenges, our analysis showed that aerocapture with Starship would produce deceleration and heating loads similar to those of other Uranus aerocapture concepts and would enable a cruise time of six years.

In addition to launching the proposed spacecraft on a faster trajectory that would reach Uranus sooner, Starship’s capabilities could also be leveraged to deploy larger masses to Uranus, enabling an enhanced mission with additional instruments or probes.

Q: What does the recent successful test of Starship tell us about the viability and timeline for a potential mission to the outer solar system?

A: The latest Starship launch marked an important milestone for the company after three failed launches in recent months, renewing optimism about the rocket’s future capabilities. Looking ahead, the program will need to demonstrate on-orbit refueling, a capability central to both SpaceX’s long-term vision of deep-space exploration and this proposed mission.

Launch vehicle selection for flagship missions typically occurs approximately two years after the official mission formulation process begins, which has not yet commenced for the Uranus mission. As such, Starship still has a few more years to demonstrate its on-orbit refueling architecture before a decision has to be made.

Overall, Starship is still under development, and significant uncertainty remains about its performance, timelines, and costs. Even so, our initial findings paint a promising picture of the benefits that could be realized by using Starship for a flagship mission to Uranus.

3 Questions: Addressing the world’s most pressing challenges

Tue, 09/30/2025 - 8:00am

The Center for International Studies (CIS) empowers students, faculty, and scholars to bring MIT’s interdisciplinary style of research and scholarship to address complex global challenges. 

In this Q&A, Mihaela Papa, the center's director of research and a principal research scientist at MIT, describes her role as well as research within the BRICS Lab at MIT — a reference the BRICS intergovernmental organization, which comprises the nations of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates. She also discusses the ongoing mission of CIS to tackle the world's most complex challenges in new and creative ways.

Q: What is your role at CIS, and some of your key accomplishments since joining the center just over a year ago?

A: I serve as director of research and principal research scientist at CIS, a role that bridges management and scholarship. I oversee grant and fellowship programs, spearhead new research initiatives, build research communities across our center's area programs and MIT schools, and mentor the next generation of scholars. My academic expertise is in international relations, and I publish on global governance and sustainable development, particularly through my new BRICS Lab. 

This past year, I focused on building collaborative platforms that highlight CIS’ role as an interdisciplinary hub and expand its research reach. With Evan Lieberman, the director of CIS, I launched the CIS Global Research and Policy Seminar series to address current challenges in global development and governance, foster cross-disciplinary dialogue, and connect theoretical insights to policy solutions. We also convened a Climate Adaptation Workshop, which examined promising strategies for financing adaptation and advancing policy innovation. We documented the outcomes in a workshop report that outlines a broader research agenda contributing to MIT’s larger climate mission.

In parallel, I have been reviewing CIS’ grant-making programs to improve how we serve our community, while also supporting regional initiatives such as research planning related to Ukraine. Together with the center's MIT-Brazil faculty director Brad Olsen, I secured a MITHIC [MIT Human Insight Collaboration] Connectivity grant to build an MIT Amazonia research community that connects MIT scholars with regional partners and strengthens collaboration across the Amazon. Finally, I launched the BRICS Lab to analyze transformations in global governance and have ongoing research on BRICS and food security and data centers in BRICS. 

Q: Tell us more about the BRICS Lab.

A: The BRICS countries comprise the majority of the world’s population and an expanding share of the global economy. [Originally comprising Brazil, Russia, India, and China, BRICS currently includes 11 nations.] As a group, they carry the collective weight to shape international rules, influence global markets, and redefine norms — yet the question remains: Will they use this power effectively? The BRICS Lab explores the implications of the bloc’s rise for international cooperation and its role in reshaping global politics. Our work focuses on three areas: the design and strategic use of informal groups like BRICS in world affairs; the coalition’s potential to address major challenges such as food security, climate change, and artificial intelligence; and the implications of U.S. policy toward BRICS for the future of multilateralism.

Q: What are the center’s biggest research priorities right now?

A: Our center was founded in response to rising geopolitical tensions and the urgent need for policy rooted in rigorous, evidence-based research. Since then, we have grown into a hub that combines interdisciplinary scholarship and actively engages with policymakers and the public. Today, as in our early years, the center brings together exceptional researchers with the ambition to address the world’s most pressing challenges in new and creative ways.

Our core focus spans security, development, and human dignity. Security studies have been a priority for the center, and our new nuclear security programming advances this work while training the next generation of scholars in this critical field. On the development front, our work has explored how societies manage diverse populations, navigate international migration, as well as engage with human rights and the changing patterns of regime dynamics.

We are pursuing new research in three areas. First, on climate change, we seek to understand how societies confront environmental risks and harms, from insurance to water and food security in the international context. Second, we examine shifting patterns of global governance as rising powers set new agendas and take on greater responsibilities in the international system. Finally, we are initiating research on the impact of AI — how it reshapes governance across international relations, what is the role of AI corporations, and how AI-related risks can be managed.

As we approach our 75th anniversary in 2026, we are excited to bring researchers together to spark bold ideas that open new possibilities for the future.

Saab 340 becomes permanent flight-test asset at Lincoln Laboratory

Tue, 09/30/2025 - 8:00am

A Saab 340 aircraft recently became a permanent fixture of the fleet at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory Flight Test Facility, which supports R&D programs across the lab. 

Over the past five years, the facility leased and operated the twin-engine turboprop, once commercially used for the regional transport of passengers and cargo. During this time, staff modified the aircraft with a suite of radar, sensing, and communications capabilities. Transitioning the aircraft from a leased to a government-owned asset retains the aircraft's capabilities for present and future R&D in support of national security and reduces costs for Lincoln Laboratory sponsors. 

With the acquisition of the Saab, the Flight Test Facility currently maintains five government-owned aircraft — including three Gulfstream IVs and a Cessna 206 — as well as a leased Twin Otter, all housed on Hanscom Air Force Base, just over a mile from the laboratory's main campus.

"Of all our aircraft, the Saab is the most multi-mission-capable," says David Culbertson, manager of the Flight Test Facility. "It's highly versatile and adaptable, like a Swiss Army knife. Researchers from across the laboratory have conducted flight tests on the Saab to develop all kinds of technologies for national security."

For example, the Saab was modified to host the Airborne Radar Testbed (ARTB), a high-performance radar system based on a computer-controlled array of antennas that can be electronically steered (instead of physically moved) in different directions. With the ARTB, researchers have matured innovative radio-frequency technology; prototyped advanced system concepts; and demonstrated concepts of operation for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions. With its open-architecture design and compliance with open standards, the ARTB can easily be reconfigured to suit specific R&D needs.

"The Saab has enabled us to rapidly prototype and mature the complex system-of-systems solutions needed to realize critical warfighter capabilities," says Ramu Bhagavatula, an assistant leader of the laboratory's Embedded and Open Systems Group. "Recently, the Saab participated in a major national exercise as a surrogate multi-INT [intelligence] ISR platform. We demonstrated machine-to-machine cueing of our multi-INT payload to automatically recognize targets designated by an operational U.S. Air Force platform. The Saab's flexibility was key to integrating diverse technologies to develop this important capability."

In anticipation of the expiration of the Saab's lease, the Flight Test Facility and Financial Services Department conducted an extensive analysis of alternatives. Comparing the operational effectiveness, suitability, and life-cycle cost of various options, this analysis determined that the optimal solution for the laboratory and the government was to purchase the aircraft.

"Having the Saab in our permanent inventory allows research groups from across the laboratory to continuously leverage each other's test beds and expertise," says Linda McCabe, a project manager in the laboratory's Communication Networks and Analysis Group. "In addition, we can invest in long-term infrastructure updates that will benefit a wide range of users. For instance, my group helped obtain authorizations from various agencies to equip the Saab with Link 16, a secure communications network used by NATO and its allies to share tactical information."

The Saab acquisition is part of a larger recapitalization effort at the Flight Test Facility to support emerging technology development for years to come. This 10-year effort, slated for completion in 2026, is retiring aging, obsolete aircraft and replacing them with newer platforms that will be more cost-effective to maintain, easier to integrate rapidly prototyped systems into, and able to operate under expanded flight envelopes (the performance limits within which an aircraft can safely fly, defined by parameters such as speed, altitude, and maneuverability).

MIT joins in constructing the Giant Magellan Telescope

Tue, 09/30/2025 - 6:00am

The following article is adapted from a joint press release issued today by MIT and the Giant Magellan Telescope.

MIT is lending its support to the Giant Magellan Telescope, joining the international consortium to advance the $2.6 billion observatory in Chile. The Institute’s participation, enabled by a transformational gift from philanthropists Phillip (Terry) Ragon ’72 and Susan Ragon, adds to the momentum to construct the Giant Magellan Telescope, whose 25.4-meter aperture will have five times the light-collecting area and up to 200 times the power of existing observatories.

“As philanthropists, Terry and Susan have an unerring instinct for finding the big levers: those interventions that truly transform the scientific landscape,” says MIT President Sally Kornbluth. “We saw this with their founding of the Ragon Institute, which pursues daring approaches to harnessing the immune system to prevent and cure human diseases. With today’s landmark gift, the Ragons enable an equally lofty mission to better understand the universe — and we could not be more grateful for their visionary support."

MIT will be the 16th member of the international consortium advancing the Giant Magellan Telescope and the 10th participant based in the United States. Together, the consortium has invested $1 billion in the observatory — the largest-ever private investment in ground-based astronomy. The Giant Magellan Telescope is already 40 percent under construction, with major components being designed and manufactured across 36 U.S. states.

“MIT is honored to join the consortium and participate in this exceptional scientific endeavor,” says Ian A. Waitz, MIT’s vice president for research. “The Giant Magellan Telescope will bring tremendous new capabilities to MIT astronomy and to U.S. leadership in fundamental science. The construction of this uniquely powerful telescope represents a vital private and public investment in scientific excellence for decades to come.”

MIT brings to the consortium powerful scientific capabilities and a legacy of astronomical excellence. MIT’s departments of Physics and of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, and the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, are internationally recognized for research in exoplanets, cosmology, and environments of extreme gravity, such as black holes and compact binary stars. MIT’s involvement will strengthen the Giant Magellan Telescope’s unique capabilities in high-resolution spectroscopy, adaptive optics, and the search for life beyond Earth. It also deepens a long-standing scientific relationship: MIT is already a partner in the existing twin Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile — one of the most scientifically valuable observing sites on Earth, and the same site where the Giant Magellan Telescope is now under construction.

“Since Galileo’s first spyglass, the world’s largest telescope has doubled in aperture every 40 to 50 years,” says Robert A. Simcoe, director of the MIT Kavli Institute and the Francis L. Friedman Professor of Physics. “Each generation’s leading instruments have resolved important scientific questions of the day and then surprised their builders with new discoveries not yet even imagined, helping humans understand our place in the universe. Together with the Giant Magellan Telescope, MIT is helping to realize our generation’s contribution to this lineage, consistent with our mission to advance the frontier of fundamental science by undertaking the most audacious and advanced engineering challenges.”

Contributing to the national strategy

MIT’s support comes at a pivotal time for the observatory. In June 2025, the National Science Foundation (NSF) advanced the Giant Magellan Telescope into its Final Design Phase, one of the final steps before it becomes eligible for federal construction funding. To demonstrate readiness and a strong commitment to U.S. leadership, the consortium offered to privately fund this phase, which is traditionally supported by the NSF.

MIT’s investment is an integral part of the national strategy to secure U.S. access to the next generation of research facilities known as “extremely large telescopes.” The Giant Magellan Telescope is a core partner in the U.S. Extremely Large Telescope Program, the nation’s top priority in astronomy. The National Academies’ Astro2020 Decadal Survey called the program “absolutely essential if the United States is to maintain a position as a leader in ground-based astronomy.” This long-term strategy also includes the recently commissioned Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. Rubin is scanning the sky to detect rare, fast-changing cosmic events, while the Giant Magellan Telescope will provide the sensitivity, resolution, and spectroscopic instruments needed to study them in detail. Together, these Southern Hemisphere observatories will give U.S. scientists the tools they need to lead 21st-century astrophysics.

“Without direct access to the Giant Magellan Telescope, the U.S. risks falling behind in fundamental astronomy, as Rubin’s most transformational discoveries will be utilized by other nations with access to their own ‘extremely large telescopes’ under development,” says Walter Massey, board chair of the Giant Magellan Telescope.

MIT’s participation brings the United States a step closer to completing the promise of this powerful new observatory on a globally competitive timeline. With federal construction funding, it is expected that the observatory could reach 90 percent completion in less than two years and become operational by the 2030s.

“MIT brings critical expertise and momentum at a time when global leadership in astronomy hangs in the balance,” says Robert Shelton, president of the Giant Magellan Telescope. “With MIT, we are not just adding a partner; we are accelerating a shared vision for the future and reinforcing the United States’ position at the forefront of science.”

Other members of the Giant Magellan Telescope consortium include the University of Arizona, Carnegie Institution for Science, The University of Texas at Austin, Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, University of Chicago, São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), Texas A&M University, Northwestern University, Harvard University, Astronomy Australia Ltd., Australian National University, Smithsonian Institution, Weizmann Institute of Science, Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, and Arizona State University.

A boon for astrophysics research and education

Access to the world’s best optical telescopes is a critical resource for MIT researchers. More than 150 individual science programs at MIT have relied on major astronomical observatories in the past three years, engaging faculty, researchers, and students in investigations into the marvels of the universe. Recent research projects have included chemical studies of the universe’s oldest stars, led by Professor Anna Frebel; spectroscopy of stars shredded by dormant black holes, led by Professor Erin Kara; and measurements of a white dwarf teetering on the precipice of a black hole, led by Professor Kevin Burdge. 

“Over many decades, researchers at the MIT Kavli Institute have used unparalleled instruments to discover previously undetected cosmic phenomena from both ground-based observations and spaceflight missions,” says Nergis Mavalvala, dean of the MIT School of Science and the Curtis (1963) and Kathleen Marble Professor of Astrophysics. “I have no doubt our brilliant colleagues will carry on that tradition with the Giant Magellan Telescope, and I can’t wait to see what they will discover next.”

The Giant Magellan Telescope will also provide a platform for advanced R&D in remote sensing, creating opportunities to build custom infrared and optical spectrometers and high-speed imagers to further study our universe.

“One cannot have a leading physics program without a leading astrophysics program. Access to time on the Giant Magellan Telescope will ensure that future generations of MIT researchers will continue to work at the forefront of astrophysical discovery for decades to come,” says Deepto Chakrabarty, head of the MIT Department of Physics, the William A. M. Burden Professor in Astrophysics, and principal investigator at the MIT Kavli Institute. “Our institutional access will help attract and retain top researchers in astrophysics, planetary science, and advanced optics, and will give our PhD students and postdocs unrivaled educational opportunities.”

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