26,385 research outputs found

    THE IMPACT OF POPULATION GROWTH ON RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY TAXES

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    A multivariate model of the effect of population on local fiscal behavior, assessed value of property and average single family home values is estimated using cross-sectional data from Oregon. Regression results suggest that property tax levies are unit elastic with respect to population, that the total assessed value of property increases less than proportionally with population, and that the average value of a single family home increases with population. These results imply a positive relationship between population and both property tax rates and the tax bill of the average single family homeowner. Ceteris paribus, increases in average residential property taxes are associated with increases in population.Public Economics,

    Dynamic elasticity by the theory of characteristics

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    Method of characteristics for analysis of elastic wave equations in Cartesian coordinate

    Quantitative Analysis of Electrotonic Structure and Membrane Properties of NMDA-Activated Lamprey Spinal Neurons

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    Parameter optimization methods were used to quantitatively analyze frequency-domain-voltage-clamp data of NMDA-activated lamprey spinal neurons simultaneously over a wide range of membrane potentials. A neuronal cable model was used to explicitly take into account receptors located on the dendritic trees. The driving point membrane admittance was measured from the cell soma in response to a Fourier synthesized point voltage clamp stimulus. The data were fitted to an equivalent cable model consisting of a single lumped soma compartment coupled resistively to a series of equal dendritic compartments. The model contains voltage-dependent NMDA sensitive (INMDA), slow potassium (IK), and leakage (IL) currents. Both the passive cable properties and the voltage dependence of ion channel kinetics were estimated, including the electrotonic structure of the cell, the steady-state gating characteristics, and the time constants for particular voltage- and time-dependent ionic conductances. An alternate kinetic formulation was developed that consisted of steady-state values for the gating parameters and their time constants at half-activation values as well as slopes of these parameters at half-activation. This procedure allowed independent restrictions on the magnitude and slope of both the steady-state gating variable and its associated time constant. Quantitative estimates of the voltage-dependent membrane ion conductances and their kinetic parameters were used to solve the nonlinear equations describing dynamic responses. The model accurately predicts current clamp responses and is consistent with experimentally measured TTX-resistant NMDA-induced patterned activity. In summary, an analysis method is developed that provides a pragmatic approach to quantitatively describe a nonlinear neuronal system

    Information seeking in the Humanities: physicality and digitality

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    This paper presents a brief overview of a research project that is examining the information seeking practices of humanities scholars. The results of this project are being used to develop digital resources to better support these work activities. Initial findings from a recent set of interviews is offered, revealing the importance of physical artefacts in the humanities scholars’ research processes and the limitations of digital resources. Finally, further work that is soon to be undertaken is summarised, and it is hoped that after participation in this workshop these ideas will be refined

    Response of Bird Populations to Long-term Changes in Local Vegetation and Regional Forest Cover

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    We analyzed data from a woodland site for a 59-year period to determine whether changes in bird populations are related to changes in the diversity and relative abundance of woody plant species even when vegetation structure, degree of forest fragmentation in the surrounding landscape, and regional changes in bird populations are taken into account. Principal component analyses generated vegetation factors encompassing variables such as total basal area, shrub density, basal area of common tree species, and measures of tree and shrub species diversity. We also calculated a forest edge/ forest area index based on GIS analysis of the landscape within 2 km of the study site. Poisson regression models revealed relationships between these covariates and population changes for 19 bird species and for seven groups of species characterized by similar migration strategies or habitat requirements. All groups of habitat specialists showed a positive relationship with the first vegetation factor, which indicates that they declined as total basal area and dominance of oaks and maples increased and as tree and shrub diversity decreased. This suggests that floristic diversity may be important for determining habitat quality. Bird species associated with the shrub layer and with hemlock stands showed positive relationships with the second vegetation factor, suggesting that the recent decline in eastern hemlocks (Tsuga canadensis) because of hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) had an adverse impact on these species. Forest migrants, shrub-layer specialists, long-distance migrants and permanent residents showed negative relationships with the forest edge/forest interior index, indicating that conservation efforts to protect bird communities should take the wider landscape into account. The strongest relationship for most species and species groups was with the first vegetation factor, which suggests that species composition and diversity of trees and shrubs may be especially important in determining abundance of many forest bird species

    Hypersonic test facility Patent

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    Hypersonic test facility for studying ablation in models under high pressure and high temperatur

    Contact metamorphism on 4 Vesta and the Petersburg polymict eucrite

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    Using equations for thermal diffusion, we model the temperature profiles in metamorphic aureoles surrounding 1km and 3km diameter spherical intrusions containing eucrite and diogenite magmas in the crust of 4 Vesta. The aureoles created by thermal diffusion experience temperatures significantly elevated above the regional thermal gradient for 10^3 to 10^4years, which is comparable to the period of time required for the intrusions to crystallize. Temperatures of wall rock adjacent to a magma body intruded at mid-crustal levels can approach those in the lower part of the crust. In contrast, it has previously been suggested that thermal processes and, by implication, regional metamorphism could have affected 4 Vesta for a period of 106-108years. Heating of underlying material by a lava flow or layer of impact melt of moderate thickness would have lasted for a period of 1-10years. In an effort to obtain approximate cooling rates, we numerically fit theoretical diffusion profiles to the observed compositional profile of a 30-μm-wide Fe-rich alteration rim at the edge of a fragment of diogenitic orthopyroxene in the Petersburg polymict eucrite, which was affected by late-stage metamorphism. Using two sets of diffusion coefficients that are similar at 800°-1000°C , but very different at lower temperatures (e.g., 500°C ), the calculated diffusion profiles that most closely fit the compositional profile suggest cooling rates ranging from 0.12°C /yr (a period of 4000years) to 0.25°C /yr (2000years). These cooling rates are very similar to those expected for contact metamorphism, and, hence, the Petersburg meteorite may represent a polymict eucrite breccia derived from near an intrusive magma body. However, this interpretation is not unique as this alteration profile might also have been formed by regional metamorphism at low temperatures
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