4,832 research outputs found

    Some remarks on the stability of time-varying systems

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    Stability of linear time varying system

    The Dwarf Galaxy Population of the Dorado group down to Mv=-11

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    We present V and I CCD photometry of suspected low-surface brightness dwarf galaxies detected in a survey covering ~2.4 deg^2 around the central region of the Dorado group of galaxies. The low-surface brightness galaxies were chosen based on their sizes and magnitudes at the limiting isophote of 26.0V\mu. The selected galaxies have magnitudes brighter than V=20 (Mv=-11 for an assumed distance to the group of 17.2 Mpc), with central surface brightnesses \mu0>22.5 V mag/arcsec^2, scale lengths h>2'', and diameters > 14'' at the limiting isophote. Using these criteria, we identified 69 dwarf galaxy candidates. Four of them are large very low-surface brightness galaxies that were detected on a smoothed image, after masking high surface brightness objects. Monte Carlo simulations performed to estimate completeness, photometric uncertainties and to evaluate our ability to detect extended low-surface brightness galaxies show that the completeness fraction is, on average, > 80% for dwarf galaxies with 17<MV<10.5-17<M_{V}<-10.5 and 22.5<\mu0<25.5 V mag/arcsec^2, for the range of sizes considered by us (D>14''). The V-I colors of the dwarf candidates vary from -0.3 to 2.3 with a peak on V-I=0.98, suggesting a range of different stellar populations in these galaxies. The projected surface density of the dwarf galaxies shows a concentration towards the group center similar in extent to that found around five X-ray groups and the elliptical galaxy NGC1132 studied by Mulchaey and Zabludoff (1999), suggesting that the dwarf galaxies in Dorado are probably physically associated with the overall potential well of the group.Comment: 32 pages, 16 postscript figures and 3 figures in GIF format, aastex v5.0. To appear in The Astronomical Journal, January 200

    Estrategias discursivas en educación científica : la historia de charles darwin para estudiantes universitarios

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    Este trabajo tuvo como objetivo incorporar aspectos de la historia de la ciencia en aulas de ciencias de la naturaleza (CN) para estudiantes universitarios de la Universidad de San Pablo en Brasil. La investigación didáctica que aquí se presenta analizó la comprensión que estos alumnos tuvieron al participar de una misma clase pero con diferentes estrategias discursivas, el enfoque narrativo y el descriptivo. El contenido seleccionado fue parte de la historia de Charles Darwin y la teoría de la selección natural. Los resultados obtenidos a partir de análisis de cuestionarios indican que el aula narrativa fue muy interesante y motivadora para los estudiantes. Por otra parte la percepción que apenas estrategias discursivas pueden modificar casi completamente la calidad de la clase y el interés y el aprendizaje de ellos, fue un hecho destacado por gran parte de los alumnos

    The Clustering Properties of Faint Galaxies

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    The two-point angular correlation function of galaxies, \wte, has been computed from a new survey of faint galaxies covering a 2 deg2^2 area near the North Galactic Pole. This survey, which is complete to limiting magnitudes \jmag=24 and \fmag=23, samples angular scales as large as 1\degpoint5. Faint galaxies are found to be more weakly clustered (by a factor of at least two) compared to galaxies observed locally. Clustering amplitudes are closer to model predictions in the red than in the blue. The weak clustering of faint galaxies cannot be explained by any plausible model of clustering evolution with redshift. However, one possible explanation of the clustering properties of intermediate redshift galaxies is that they resemble those of starburst galaxies and H II region galaxies, which are observed locally to possess weak clustering amplitudes. Our clustering amplitudes are also similar to those of nearby late-type galaxies, which are observed to be more weakly clustered than early-type galaxies A simple, self-consistent model is presented that predicts the fraction of galaxies in the ``excess'' population at intermediate redshifts, and correctly matches observed color distributions. The available data on the clustering properties of faint galaxies are consistent with this model if the ``excess'' population of faint blue galaxies is also the weakly clustered population. Evidence is presented that the power-law slope of the angular correlation function becomes shallower at fainter magnitudes. A similar effect is seen locally both for dwarf galaxies and for galaxies with late morphological type;Comment: 23 pages, uuencoded compressed PostScript file, figures anonymous ftp to 146.155.21.10 file pub/p3/p3fig.uu.Z, accepted ApJ, IP/3/9
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