Recent portrait work featuring professors and scientists in different departments at MIT. The ongoing pandemic has necessitated some changes to making portraits these days, almost always outdoors and often at portrait subjects' houses around the area rather than in their labs.

Lindley Winslow, Department of Physics

Lindley Winslow is the Jerrold R. Zacharias Career Development Associate Professor of Physics at MIT, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Mon., Feb. 22, 2021. According to her MIT bio, Winslow is an experimental nuclear and particle physicist whose work focuses on how the physics of fundamental particles shaped our universe and the development of specialized experiments. She is currently working on searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay and axion dark matter.
Lindley Winslow is the Jerrold R. Zacharias Career Development Associate Professor of Physics at MIT, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Mon., Feb. 22, 2021. According to her MIT bio, Winslow is an experimental nuclear and particle physicist whose work focuses on how the physics of fundamental particles shaped our universe and the development of specialized experiments. She is currently working on searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay and axion dark matter.
Lindley Winslow is the Jerrold R. Zacharias Career Development Associate Professor of Physics at MIT, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Mon., Feb. 22, 2021. According to her MIT bio, Winslow is an experimental nuclear and particle physicist whose work focuses on how the physics of fundamental particles shaped our universe and the development of specialized experiments. She is currently working on searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay and axion dark matter.

Hazhir Rahmandad, Sloan School of Management

Hazhir Rahmandad is the Schussel Family Professor of Management Science and an Associate Professor of System Dynamics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, seen here in Brookline, Massachusetts, on Thu., May 6, 2021. From his MIT Sloan bio: "Hazhir's research shows how complex organizational dynamics can lead to heterogeneity in organizational practices and outcomes."
Hazhir Rahmandad is the Schussel Family Professor of Management Science and an Associate Professor of System Dynamics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, seen here in Brookline, Massachusetts, on Thu., May 6, 2021. From his MIT Sloan bio: "Hazhir's research shows how complex organizational dynamics can lead to heterogeneity in organizational practices and outcomes."
Hazhir Rahmandad is the Schussel Family Professor of Management Science and an Associate Professor of System Dynamics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, seen here in Brookline, Massachusetts, on Thu., May 6, 2021. From his MIT Sloan bio: "Hazhir's research shows how complex organizational dynamics can lead to heterogeneity in organizational practices and outcomes."
Hazhir Rahmandad is the Schussel Family Professor of Management Science and an Associate Professor of System Dynamics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, seen here in Brookline, Massachusetts, on Thu., May 6, 2021. From his MIT Sloan bio: "Hazhir's research shows how complex organizational dynamics can lead to heterogeneity in organizational practices and outcomes."

Diana Yousef-Martinek, D-Lab research associate and CEO of Change:Water Labs

Diana Yousef-Martinek is the CEO of Change:Water Labs, a company working on deploying toilets called the iThrones that can dehydrate and condense waste for easier transport in areas where people live without indoor plumbing. Yousef-Martinek said that the design is based on toilet designs she worked on while developing waste systems for NASA. She is seen here outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thu., Feb. 18, 2021. Yousef-Martinek is a research associate at MIT's D-Lab.
Diana Yousef-Martinek is the CEO of Change:Water Labs, a company working on deploying toilets called the iThrones that can dehydrate and condense waste for easier transport in areas where people live without indoor plumbing. Yousef-Martinek said that the design is based on toilet designs she worked on while developing waste systems for NASA. She is seen here outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thu., Feb. 18, 2021. Yousef-Martinek is a research associate at MIT's D-Lab.
Diana Yousef-Martinek is the CEO of Change:Water Labs, a company working on deploying toilets called the iThrones that can dehydrate and condense waste for easier transport in areas where people live without indoor plumbing. Yousef-Martinek said that the design is based on toilet designs she worked on while developing waste systems for NASA. She is seen here outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thu., Feb. 18, 2021. Yousef-Martinek is a research associate at MIT's D-Lab.

Adam P. Willard, Department of Chemistry

Adam P. Willard is an Associate Professor in MIT's Department of Chemistry, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wed., March 10, 2021. According to his MIT bio, Willard's research uses "theory and simulation to explore the role of molecular fluctuation in a variety of chemical phenomena."
Adam P. Willard is an Associate Professor in MIT's Department of Chemistry, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wed., March 10, 2021. According to his MIT bio, Willard's research uses "theory and simulation to explore the role of molecular fluctuation in a variety of chemical phenomena."
Adam P. Willard is an Associate Professor in MIT's Department of Chemistry, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wed., March 10, 2021. According to his MIT bio, Willard's research uses "theory and simulation to explore the role of molecular fluctuation in a variety of chemical phenomena."
Adam P. Willard is an Associate Professor in MIT's Department of Chemistry, seen here on MIT's campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wed., March 10, 2021. According to his MIT bio, Willard's research uses "theory and simulation to explore the role of molecular fluctuation in a variety of chemical phenomena."
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