98 research outputs found
Beneficios y limitaciones del TLC entre Colombia y Estados Unidos en el camino hacia una mayor inserción a la globalización
En este artículo se exponen las razones por la cual un país en vía de desarrollo
como Colombia busca una mayor inserción a la globalización, a través de la firma de
un Tratado de libre comercio con Estados Unidos, con el fin de convertirse en un
país desarrollado. Se analizan los beneficios y las limitaciones de la firma de este
tratado, ya que Colombia no posee una industria preparada para la llegada de
productos mucho más competitivos, que los que se ofrecen localmente y además el
país no posee ninguna industria consolidada, todas en crecimiento. Se muestra el
ejemplo de cómo un país de la zona logró convertirse en una de las economías
emergentes más prometedoras, gracias a un desarrollo interno hacia el exterior
como el caso de Brasil. También los problemas culturales, y el pensamiento poco
colectivo de la nación como causales de no conveniencia para la firma de este, y los
impactos que traería colocarle todas las fichas a las atracción de Inversión extranjera
directa como método de recolección de divisas y aumento de ingresos del país.En este artículo se exponen las razones por la cual un país en vía de desarrollo
como Colombia busca una mayor inserción a la globalización, a través de la firma de
un Tratado de libre comercio con Estados Unidos, con el fin de convertirse en un
país desarrollado. Se analizan los beneficios y las limitaciones de la firma de este
tratado, ya que Colombia no posee una industria preparada para la llegada de
productos mucho más competitivos, que los que se ofrecen localmente y además el
país no posee ninguna industria consolidada, todas en crecimiento. Se muestra el
ejemplo de cómo un país de la zona logró convertirse en una de las economías
emergentes más prometedoras, gracias a un desarrollo interno hacia el exterior
como el caso de Brasil. También los problemas culturales, y el pensamiento poco
colectivo de la nación como causales de no conveniencia para la firma de este, y los
impactos que traería colocarle todas las fichas a las atracción de Inversión extranjera
directa como método de recolección de divisas y aumento de ingresos del país.Incluye bibliografí
Nanotechnology and the Developing World
How nanotechnology can be harnessed to address some of the world's most critical development problem
Plan de negocio Draftman Autonomous /
Cuando surge un problema siempre llegara con este la necesidad de encontrar la
solución, donde tal vez muchos no la vean, otros solo lo piensan y hay quienes lo
solucionan. Estos problemas traen consigo gran diversidad de soluciones que llevan
a su disminución, y la continuidad de la necesidad de acabar con los problemas
trae consigo muchas más necesidad de realizar mejoras. Los problemas y las
dificultades para muchos no existen, hasta que lo pueden ver, y la necesidad de dar
solución a este no está, hasta que lo requieran, el conformismo deja grandes
problemas sin soluciones o con soluciones inadecuadas.Incluye referencias bibliográfica
Optically-passive spirals: The missing link in gradual star formation suppression upon cluster infall
Galaxies migrate from the blue cloud to the red sequence when their star
formation is quenched. Here, we report on galaxies quenched by environmental
effects and not by mergers or strong AGN as often invoked: They form stars at a
reduced rate which is optically even less conspicuous, and manifest a
transition population of blue spirals evolving into S0 galaxies. These
'optically passive' or 'red spirals' are found in large numbers in the STAGES
project (and by Galaxy Zoo) in the infall region of clusters and groups.Comment: Proceedings of "The Starburst-AGN connection" conference held in
Shanghai, Oct 27-31, 200
The environmental dependence of the structure of outer galactic discs in STAGES spiral galaxies
We present an analysis of V-band radial surface brightness profiles for
spiral galaxies from the field and cluster environments using Hubble Space
Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging and data from the Space Telescope
A901/2 Galaxy Evolution Survey (STAGES). We use a large sample of ~330 face-on
to intermediately inclined spiral galaxies and assess the effect of the galaxy
environment on the azimuthally averaged radial surface brightness mu profiles
for each galaxy in the outer stellar disc (24 < mu < 26.5 mag per sq arcsec).
For galaxies with a purely exponential outer disc (~50 per cent), we determine
the significance of an environmental dependence on the outer disc scalelength
h_out. For galaxies with a broken exponential in their outer disc, either
down-bending (truncation, ~10 per cent) or up-bending (anti-truncation, ~40 per
cent), we measure the strength T (outer-to-inner scalelength ratio,
log_10(h_out/h_in) of the mu breaks and determine the significance of an
environmental dependence on break strength T. Surprisingly, we find no evidence
to suggest any such environmental dependence on either outer disc scalelength
h_out or break strength T, implying that the galaxy environment is not
affecting the stellar distribution in the outer stellar disc. We also find that
for galaxies with small effective radii (r_e < 3 kpc) there is a lack of outer
disc truncations in both the field and cluster environments. Our results
suggest that the stellar distribution in the outer disc of spiral galaxies is
not significantly affected by the galaxy environment.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS. Appendix A available at
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/~ppxdtm/STAGES_profiles_appendix.pd
A new automatic method to identify galaxy mergers - I. Description and application to the Space Telescope A901/902 Galaxy Evolution Survey
We present a new automatic method to identify galaxy mergers using the morphological information contained in the residual images of galaxies after the subtraction of a smooth Sérsic model. The removal of the bulk signal from the host galaxy light is done with the aim of detecting the much fainter and elusive minor mergers. The specific morphological parameters that are used in the merger diagnostic suggested here are the residual flux fraction (RFF) and the asymmetry of the residuals [A(Res)]. The new diagnostic has been calibrated and optimized so that the resulting merger sample is very complete. However, the contamination by non-mergers is also high. If the same optimization method is adopted for combinations of other structural parameters such as the Concentration, Asymmetry, clumpineSs (CAS) system, the merger indicator we introduce yields merger samples of equal or higher statistical quality than the samples obtained through the use of other structural parameters. We investigate the ability of the method presented here to select minor mergers by identifying a sample of visually classified mergers that would not have been picked up by the use of the CAS system, when using its usual limits. However, given the low prevalence of mergers among the general population of galaxies and the optimization used here, we find that the merger diagnostic introduced in this work is best used as a negative merger test, that is, it is very effective at selecting non-merging galaxies. In common with all the currently available automatic methods, the sample of merger candidates selected is heavily contaminated by non-mergers, and further steps are needed to produce a clean merger sample. This merger diagnostic has been developed using the Hubble Space Telescope/ACS F606W images of the A901/902 multiple cluster system (z= 0.165) obtained by the Space Telescope A901/902 Galaxy Evolution Survey team. In particular, we have focused on a mass- and magnitude-limited sample (log M/M⊙ > 9.0, RVega, Total≤ 23.5 mag) which includes 905 cluster galaxies and 655 field galaxies of all morphological type
A New Automatic Method to Identify Galaxy Mergers I. Description and Application to the STAGES Survey
We present an automatic method to identify galaxy mergers using the
morphological information contained in the residual images of galaxies after
the subtraction of a Sersic model. The removal of the bulk signal from the host
galaxy light is done with the aim of detecting the fainter minor mergers. The
specific morphological parameters that are used in the merger diagnostic
suggested here are the Residual Flux Fraction and the asymmetry of the
residuals. The new diagnostic has been calibrated and optimized so that the
resulting merger sample is very complete. However, the contamination by
non-mergers is also high. If the same optimization method is adopted for
combinations of other structural parameters such as the CAS system, the merger
indicator we introduce yields merger samples of equal or higher statistical
quality than the samples obtained through the use of other structural
parameters. We explore the ability of the method presented here to select minor
mergers by identifying a sample of visually classified mergers that would not
have been picked up by the use of the CAS system, when using its usual limits.
Given the low prevalence of mergers among the general population of galaxies
and the optimization used here, we find that the merger diagnostic introduced
in this work is best used as a negative merger test, i.e., it is very effective
at selecting non-merging galaxies. As with all the currently available
automatic methods, the sample of merger candidates selected is contaminated by
non-mergers, and further steps are needed to produce a clean sample. This
merger diagnostic has been developed using the HST/ACS F606W images of the
A901/02 cluster (z=0.165) obtained by the STAGES team. In particular, we have
focused on a mass and magnitude limited sample (log M/M_{O}>9.0,
R_{Vega}<23.5mag)) which includes 905 cluster galaxies and 655 field galaxies
of all morphological types.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables. To appear in MNRA
The STAGES view of red spirals and dusty red galaxies: Mass-dependent quenching of star-formation in cluster infall
We investigate the properties of optically passive spirals and dusty red
galaxies in the A901/2 cluster complex at redshift ~0.17 using restframe
near-UV-optical SEDs, 24 micron IR data and HST morphologies from the STAGES
dataset. The cluster sample is based on COMBO-17 redshifts with an rms
precision of sigma_cz~2000 km/sec. We find that 'dusty red galaxies' and
'optically passive spirals' in A901/2 are largely the same phenomenon, and that
they form stars at a substantial rate, which is only 4x lower than that in blue
spirals at fixed mass. This star formation is more obscured than in blue
galaxies and its optical signatures are weak. They appear predominantly in the
stellar mass range of log M*/Msol=[10,11] where they constitute over half of
the star-forming galaxies in the cluster; they are thus a vital ingredient for
understanding the overall picture of star formation quenching in clusters. We
find that the mean specific SFR of star-forming galaxies in the cluster is
clearly lower than in the field, in contrast to the specific SFR properties of
blue galaxies alone, which appear similar in cluster and field. Such a rich red
spiral population is best explained if quenching is a slow process and
morphological transformation is delayed even more. At log M*/Msol<10, such
galaxies are rare, suggesting that their quenching is fast and accompanied by
morphological change. We note, that edge-on spirals play a minor role; despite
being dust-reddened they form only a small fraction of spirals independent of
environment.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
The STAGES view of red spirals and dusty red galaxies: mass-dependent quenching of star formation in cluster infall
We investigate the properties of optically passive spirals and dusty red galaxies in the A901/2 cluster complex at redshift ∼0.17 using rest-frame near-ultraviolet-optical spectral energy distributions, 24-μm infrared data and Hubble Space Telescope morphologies from the STAGES data set. The cluster sample is based on COMBO-17 redshifts with an rms precision of σcz≈ 2000 km s−1. We find that ‘dusty red galaxies' and ‘optically passive spirals' in A901/2 are largely the same phenomenon, and that they form stars at a substantial rate, which is only four times lower than that in blue spirals at fixed mass. This star formation is more obscured than in blue galaxies and its optical signatures are weak. They appear predominantly in the stellar mass range of log M*/M⊙=[10, 11] where they constitute over half of the star-forming galaxies in the cluster; they are thus a vital ingredient for understanding the overall picture of star formation quenching in clusters. We find that the mean specific star formation rate (SFR) of star-forming galaxies in the cluster is clearly lower than in the field, in contrast to the specific SFR properties of blue galaxies alone, which appear similar in cluster and field. Such a rich red spiral population is best explained if quenching is a slow process and morphological transformation is delayed even more. At log M*/M⊙ < 10, such galaxies are rare, suggesting that their quenching is fast and accompanied by morphological change. We note that edge-on spirals play a minor role; despite being dust reddened they form only a small fraction of spirals independent of environmen
- …