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Breakthroughs of 2025

In Focus

Breakthroughs   of 2025

Harvard scientists published thousands of studies in 2025, advancing knowledge and discovering solutions in a time when research funding is uncertain.

An extraordinary year

This year, the Harvard community has had research breakthroughs in genetics, artificial intelligence, disease treatments, and so much more.


Moving medicine forward

Harvard has been making breakthroughs in health and medicine since founding Harvard Medical School in 1782.


Lung cancer sample in a test tube
  • Oncology

New hope for a hard-to-treat lung cancer

Sevabertinib, created by the Broad-Bayer oncology research alliance, is a new oral treatment option for a type of non-small-cell lung cancer, the most common type of lung cancer.

New hope for a hard-to-treat lung cancer
  • immunology

Researchers identify special class of cells that safeguard immunity and memory

Blue and black image of T-cells
Researchers identify special class of cells that safeguard immunity and memory
  • pharmacology

GLP-1 medications may significantly reduce the risk of hospitalization due to heart failure

Close up of a GLP-1 injector
GLP-1 medications may significantly reduce the risk of hospitalization due to heart failure
  • Psychiatry

A non-drug smart patch demonstrated a reduction in cravings for alcohol and drugs

Four glasses of beer
A non-drug smart patch demonstrated a reduction in cravings for alcohol and drugs
  • Developmental Biology

Researchers uncover key cell signal that triggers tissue response to amino acid insufficiency

Researchers in a lab
Researchers uncover key cell signal that triggers tissue response to amino acid insufficiency
  • cardiology

Harvard scientists offer clues into how to treat deadly aortic aneurysms and hypertension

A model of a heart
Harvard scientists offer clues into how to treat deadly aortic aneurysms and hypertension

Getting the science right

Advances in science and technology are improving not just our lives, but the world around us.


The power of research at Harvard
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How research becomes breakthroughs

At Harvard, students, faculty, and fellows come together to turn ideas into life-changing innovations.

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The need for speed

Harvard’s School of Engineering researchers have developed a material that can dimple like a golf ball and change its aerodynamic properties on demand.

Learn more about this metamaterial

High-tech topography tables that utilize GIS data and computational modeling help architects understand and design for complex climate challenges.

Harvard scientists have developed an energy-saving membrane, similar to a coffee filter, capable of separating water vapor directly from the air.

Rowland Institute researchers have pioneered a new way to achieve the coolest possible temperatures to image materials at a sub-atomic scale.

Life-changing innovations

At Harvard, we take breakthroughs from the lab and translate them into real-world solutions that improve the lives of people around the world.


The SEC building

Moving high‑impact tech to market

Three research projects that address urgent societal challenges—cardiovascular health, rising data demands, and the future of quantum computation—have won Grid Accelerator awards.

Read more about the projects

A man wears a robotic vest while two researchers look on

Wearable robotic device for stroke survivors improves mobility

This soft, wearable robotic device developed at the Harvard Move Lab is helping stroke survivors and people with other movement impairments regain mobility and independence.

Learn more about the device

Pushing scholarship ahead

Throughout the humanities, breakthroughs and discoveries change the way we see the world and inform the way we improve it.

Learn more about how Harvard is innovating scholarship

two people on an archeological dig

Understanding the Earth

Through research and archeology, Harvard scientists got one step closer to understanding the origins of life and the early history of Earth’s largest animal group.

An illustration showing a black hole within a cloud in space

Exploring the stars

Research papers from Harvard astronomers explored new evidence of the closest known supermassive black hole and a cosmic explosion that could be a rare flare from a magnetar—one of the most mysterious objects in the universe.

Lauren Williams teaching

Crunching the numbers

Harvard’s Lauren Williams won a MacArthur ‘genius grant’ for her theoretical breakthroughs understanding phenomena such as tsunamis and traffic.

A plane flying over green land

Protecting the planet

Harvard researchers are learning how to capture emissions from fuels and create fuels from renewable sources, like city waste.

The next generation

Harvard’s strong history of mentorship is guiding this year’s students to uncovering next year’s breakthroughs.