2009 APS April Meeting
Volume 54, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, May 2–5, 2009;
Denver, Colorado
Session B7: Physics in Latin America
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Room: Governor's Square 12
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIP
Chair: Galileo Violini, Universita della Calabria
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.APR.B7.3
Abstract: B7.00003 : Physics in the Andean Countries: A Perspective from Condensed Matter, Novel Materials and Nanotechnology
11:57 AM–12:33 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
P. Prieto
(Director, Center of Excellence on Novel Materials - CENM, Universidad del Valle in Cali, Colombia)
We will discuss the current state of R\&D in the fields of
condensed matter, novel materials, and nanotechnology in the
Andean nations. We will initially consider Latin America and the
Caribbean (LAC) to then visualize individual developments, as
well as those for the region as a whole in these fields of
knowledge in each of the nations constituting the Andean Region
(Bolivia, Ecuador, Chile, Venezuela, Peru, and Colombia). Based
on Science \& Technology watch exercises in the countries
involved, along with the Iberian American and Inter-American
Science \& Technology Network of Indicators (Red de indicadores
de Ciencia y Tecnolog\'ia (RICYT) iberoamericana e
interamericana)1, we will reveal statistical data that will shed
light on the development in the fields mentioned. As will be
noted, total R\&D investment in Latin American and Caribbean
countries remained constant since 1997. In spite of having
reached a general increase in publications without international
collaboration in LAC nations, the countries with greatest
research productivity in Latin America (Argentina, Mexico,
Brazil, and Chile) have strengthened their international
collaboration with the United States, France, Germany, and Italy
through close links associated with the formation processes of
their researchers. Academic and research integration is
evaluated through joint authorship of scientific articles,
evidencing close collaboration in fields of research. This
principle has been used in the creation of cooperation networks
among participating nations. As far as networks of research on
condensed matter, novel materials, and nanotechnology, the Andean
nations have not consolidated a regional network allowing
permanent and effective cooperation in research and technological
development; as would be expected, given their idiomatic and
cultural similarities, their historical background, and
geographical proximity, which have been integrating factors in
other research areas or socio-economic aspects. This panorama
reveals the scarcity of collaboration among the Andean nations,
one which does not manage inclusion in international statistics.
Said isolated research processes in the countries of the region
may be responsible for the scant productivity in R\&D in the
fields of condensed matter, novel materials, and nanotechnology.
Countries like Panama, Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru have increased
their investments in research on environmental issues and
medicine; while productivity and development in Physics have not
been consolidated as state policy in R\&D. In conclusion, we
will see the results of specific follow up to research in the
fields of condensed matter, novel materials, and nanotechnology
from an interdisciplinary perspective, describing the research
themes in said fields, patents, and registrations.
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Reference: http://www.ricyt.org/ La Red de Indicadores de Ciencia
y Tecnolog\'ia -Iberoamericana e Interamericana- (RICYT)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.APR.B7.3