
Massachusetts Institute of Technology / MIT Museum
Building N51 265 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02139
Open Daily 10am – 5pm / Closed Major Holidays
The Mark Epstein Innovation GalleryThe Mark Epstein Innovation Gallery opened to the public on September 29, 2007.
The MIT Media Laboratory City CarThe creators of the City Car envision their vehicle as part of a new urban transportation ecosystem. It's a new kind of car that is part mechanical wonder and part public resource. You use the car only when you need it - parking it for the next customer's use in a stack, against other cars, thus using a minimum of public space. The exhibition features models and prototypes of the CityCar, as well as a video game simulation that shows users how the steering mechanism in the city car will work. MIT graduate students at the Media Laboratory created much of the exhibit which aims to show not just the CityCar concept but also the evolution of an idea, how it is modeled and then put into practice. Zebrafish as a Model for Cancer ResearchSet in the middle of the Mark Epstein Innovation Gallery visitors will find a large aquarium filled with zebrafish bred from the collection that MIT scientists used for the study of cancer. Visitors have the opportunity to watch interactive videos of researchers in the lab of Nancy Hopkins and to see for themselves how fish are used in research by examining the differences between diseased and normal cell tissues. MIT and the Sea: Pioneers in Ocean ExplorationThroughout the 20th and 21st centuries, MIT's engineers and oceanographers have worked together to create technologies that have explored the deep ocean environment. This unique multimedia exhibition showcases MIT engineers and the roles they have played developing tethered, undersea robots called remotely operated vehicles which have been used for ocean exploration, national security and offshore energy production. Klein Side Scan Sonar: A World Leader in Ocean ExplorationMIT engineers have long played a major role in developing technologies that enable a broad range of work in the oceans. This ever changing hostile environment is a supreme challenge to all who work at sea. Sensing the underwater environment is vital to many things people take for granted such as global communications, energy and national security. To learn more about MIT contributions to commercial development of the most important underwater sensing technology in use today, click on the link above and visit the Klein Side Scan Sonar exhibit at the MIT Museum. |
![]() Changing Displays The photograph above features the work of MIT Assistant Professor of Cognitive Science, Aude Oliva who, with colleagues, develops hybrid images that provide new information about the cognitive functions of the brain. |