A WRR report on artificial intelligence recently gained a lot of media attention. What does it say and what can TU Delft do? Pro Vice Rector AI Geert-Jan Houben reflects.
Inspired by spiderwebs, researchers have designed the Holy Grail for quantum technology that works at room temperature. “We hitchhiked on millions of years of evolution.”
What is it like to do research on the world’s largest crane vessel? Only a handful of people in the world can report this first-hand. Among them three scientists at TU Delft.
Tired of corona travel restrictions? Take a virtual voyage to the future of the internet on the new QuTech website and meet Alice, who is too smart for hackers.
A study mapping the photovoltaic potential of the Dutch highways says they could power all present electric vehicles and more. Still, there are plenty of practical issues.
Never before have ship movements been mapped so completely: from a national overview to a local hub. “You can see how the network functions.”
With the plastic soup in the ocean in mind, TU Delft engineer Jerry de Vos developed a scanner that should make plastic recycling easier. He won the James Dyson Award with it.
Hoe ziet Nederland er over honderd jaar uit als het niet lukt om de zeespiegelstijging tot een meter te beperken? Jan Rotmans schetst in zijn boek Omarm de Chaos een beeld.
To make energy transition possible, new forms of cooperation are necessary. TPM researchers are organising a conference on ‘social innovation’ on 18 and 19 November.