
Alumni Spotlight: Eli Luberoff (YC ’09)
Image 1: A computer running the web version of Desmos, and a phone running the Desmos mobile app. Photo by Daniel Havlat. Eli Luberoff (YC
Image 1: A computer running the web version of Desmos, and a phone running the Desmos mobile app. Photo by Daniel Havlat. Eli Luberoff (YC
Image 1: Art by Madeleine Popofsky. When we think about immunizations, we typically imagine shots administered to the upper arm or the thigh. But in
Art by Nina (Yurou) Liu At several points in Earth’s history, our home world looked nothing like the blue planet we know today—instead, it was
Art by Luna Aguilar The moment a paper cut penetrates the skin, a cascade of biological events aimed at healing the wound is set into
Image 1: Art by Alondra Moreno Santana The act of walking is so routine that many of us take it for granted, yet it requires
Image 1: From left to right: Professor Seth Herzon, Brandon Alexander, Vaani Gupta, and Noah Bartfield. Photo by Emily Poag. Modern chemistry has advanced our
Figure 1. An older woman gazes upwards. Image courtesy of Flickr. Today, the US population is older than ever, and the demographic of adults ages
Figure 1. Inspired by Boston’s marshy landscape, artist Carlona Aragon constructed High Tide, an art installation that vividly portrays the projected flooding caused by sea
Figure 1. Courtesy of iStock by Getty Images. The amount of pension saved throughout one’s career is a key factor for determining the optimal time
Figure 1. This is a tree-like system of hexagonal nanopores showing channel flow. Courtesy of Flickr. When it comes to any filter—a sieve, a water
Image courtesy of Pixabay. On a typical walk through New York City, you might expect to encounter tall, glass-covered skyscrapers, brightly lit department stores, and
Image Courtesy of Pixabay. Worsening asthma, severe coughing, and shortness of breath: all of these phenomena are side effects of ground-level ozone—a dangerous mixture of