2 resultados para app ios swift pesci ecosostenibilita mercato-ittico citizen-science xcode sostenibilita
em Universidade Complutense de Madrid
Resumo:
Desde hace unos años, parece que la informática ha ido invadiendo numerosos campos de la ciencia, se ha ido consolidando como parte fundamental en el desarrollo y la tecnología y ya se puede ver como motor de la economía, las comunicaciones, el comercio e incluso, la medicina. Este trabajo se centra en la aplicación de la informática en el área de las enfermedades infecciosas, intentando contribuir con una nueva idea que revolucione el mundo de las mismas dentro de la medicina, en una situación en la que el término “Smart City” cada vez es más importante. Se trata de un sistema formado por una app para Android y una web controlada y gestionada por un médico, la cual permite identificar posibles usuarios contagiados, localizar focos de contagios y gestionar de una manera óptima, el estado y los avisos de cada usuario. En esta memoria se describe el trabajo realizado, la arquitectura del sistema, las tecnologías utilizadas, el diseño de la aplicación móvil y de la página web, su implementación, las pruebas realizadas, las conclusiones a las que se ha llegado y las posibles mejoras que se podrían incluir en el proyecto en un futuro.
Resumo:
Aims. Long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) are associated with the deaths of massive stars and might therefore be a potentially powerful tool for tracing cosmic star formation. However, especially at low redshifts (z< 1.5) LGRBs seem to prefer particular types of environment. Our aim is to study the host galaxies of a complete sample of bright LGRBs to investigate the effect of the environment on GRB formation. Methods. We studied host galaxy spectra of the Swift/BAT6 complete sample of 14 z< 1 bright LGRBs. We used the detected nebular emission lines to measure the dust extinction, star formation rate (SFR), and nebular metallicity (Z) of the hosts and supplemented the data set with previously measured stellar masses M_*. The distributions of the obtained properties and their interrelations (e.g. mass-metallicity and SFR-M_* relations) are compared to samples of field star-forming galaxies. Results. We find that LGRB hosts at z< 1 have on average lower SFRs than if they were direct star formation tracers. By directly comparing metallicity distributions of LGRB hosts and star-forming galaxies, we find a good match between the two populations up to 12 +log (O/H)~8.4−8.5, after which the paucity of metal-rich LGRB hosts becomes apparent. The LGRB host galaxies of our complete sample are consistent with the mass-metallicity relation at similar mean redshift and stellar masses. The cutoff against high metallicities (and high masses) can explain the low SFR values of LGRB hosts. We find a hint of an increased incidence of starburst galaxies in the Swift/BAT6 z< 1 sample with respect to that of a field star-forming population. Given that the SFRs are low on average, the latter is ascribed to low stellar masses. Nevertheless, the limits on the completeness and metallicity availability of current surveys, coupled with the limited number of LGRB host galaxies, prevents us from investigating more quantitatively whether the starburst incidence is such as expected after taking into account the high-metallicity aversion of LGRB host galaxies.