MIT-CTU Invited Lecture: From Bits to Atoms

#bits #atoms #digital #structures #maker #movement #MIT #electrical-engineering #fabrication #manufacturing #printing #STEM
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MIT - CTU


Lecture by prof. Neil Gershenfeld from MIT, US — a leading innovator and scientist at the intersection of digital technologies and the physical world, director of the Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA) and founder of the global Fab Lab network.

Lecture Details
  • Title: From Bits to Atoms
  • Speaker: prof. Neil Gershenfeld, Director, MIT CBA
  • Date: Friday, July 11
  • Venue: CTU Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Karlovo náměstí 13, Zenger Auditorium (KN:E-107)
  • Time: 14:00
 
 
About the Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA)

An interdisciplinary MIT research center founded in 2001 with NSF support.

Explores how digital information (bits) can be turned into physical structures (atoms) — and vice versa.

    • Research includes quantum computing, microfluidic logic, physical cryptography, digital materials, genome recoding, and more.
    • CBA runs advanced labs (from nanoscale to 3D printing), teaches the iconic course “How to Make (Almost) Anything”, and supports startups and the global Fab Lab network.

 



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



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  • CTU, Faculty of Electrical Engineering
  • Karlovo náměstí 13,
  • Prague 2, Czech Republic
  • Czech Republic 120 00
  • Building: E-building
  • Room Number: Zenger Auditorium (KN:E-107)
  • Click here for Map

  • Contact Event Host
  • The event organizer:

    assist. prof. Jiří Zemánek, PhD

    Department of Control Engineering 

    Faculty of Electrical Engineering 

    Czech Technical University in Prague

    jiri.zemanek@fel.cvut.cz



  Speakers

prof. Gershenfeld of Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Topic:

From Bits to Atoms

Prof. Gershenfeld from MIT will be discussing the intersection of digital information and the physical world, an area that underpins developments in personal fabrication, digital manufacturing, and the maker culture.  This is a great opportunity to hear from one of the leading minds behind the maker movement and advanced fabrication technologies.
 
Neil Gershenfeld
  • Director of the CBA and professor at MIT in the field of media and technology.
  • Studied physics at Swarthmore College (BA), earned his PhD at Cornell University (1990).
  • Member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, Fellow of AAAS and APS, and featured in Scientific American, Popular Mechanics, and more.
  • Described as the “intellectual father of the maker movement,” he helped launch over 2,500 Fab Labs worldwide.
 

Biography:

Prof. Neil Gershenfeld is the Director of MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms, where his unique laboratory is breaking down boundaries between the digital and physical worlds, from pioneering quantum computing to digital fabrication to the Internet of Things. Technology from his lab has been seen and used in settings including New York's Museum of Modern Art and rural Indian villages, the White House and the World Economic Forum, inner-city community centers and automobile safety systems, Las Vegas shows and Sami herds. He is the author of numerous technical publications, patents, and books including Designing Reality, Fab, When Things Start To Think, The Nature of Mathematical Modeling, and The Physics of Information Technology, and has been featured in media such as The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, CNN, and PBS. He has been elected a Member of the National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the American Physical Society, has been named one of Scientific American's 50 leaders in science and technology, as one of 40 Modern-Day Leonardos by the Museum of Science and Industry, one of Popular Mechanic's 25 Makers, has been selected as a CNN/Time/Fortune Principal Voice, by Prospect/Foreign Policy as one of the top 100 public intellectuals, received the Mario Pani Award from Anahuac Mexico University, and is a recipient of the Irwin Sizer Award for the Most Significant Improvement to MIT Education. He's been called the intellectual father of the maker movement, founding a growing global network of over 2500 fab labs in 150 countries that provide widespread access to prototype tools for personal fabrication, directing the Fab Academy for distributed research and education in the principles and practices of digital fabrication, and chairing the Fab Foundation. He is a co-founder of the Interspecies Internet and of the Science and Entertainment Exchange. Dr. Gershenfeld has a BA in Physics with High Honors from Swarthmore College, a Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Cornell University, honorary doctorates from Swarthmore College, Strathclyde University and the University of Antwerp, was a Junior Fellow of the Harvard University Society of Fellows, and a member of the research staff at Bell Labs.

Research advances by Dr. Gershenfeld and his students and colleagues working at the boundary between physical science and computer science include: the first significant quantum computations, using nuclear spins in molecules; microfluidic bubble logic, with bits that transport materials as well as information; physical one-way cryptographic functions, implemented by mesoscopic light scattering; noise-locked loops that entrain on codes, which led to analog logic integrated circuits that use continuous device dynamics to solve digital problems; asynchronous logic automata to align hardware with software; Internet 0 for interdevice internetworking; microslot probes for ultra-small-sample structural studies; integrated 6-axis inertial measurement based on the dynamics of trapped particles; charge source tomography for electric field imaging and intrabody signaling; electropermanent actuators for high torque at low RPM with static holding; and additive assembly of functional digital materials that can be used in the highest modulus ultralight structures

Email:

Address:20 Ames Street, Room E15-411, Cambridge, MA , Massachusetts, United States, 02139





Agenda

Prof. Gershenfeld, one of the leading minds behind the maker movement and advanced fabrication technologies, will be discussing the intersection of digital information and the physical world, an area that underpins developments in personal fabrication, digital manufacturing, and the maker culture.  



Prague, July 11, 2025