92,963 research outputs found
Mechanical law enforcement: speeding and camera technology
Excessive and inappropriate speeding is--according to the ACPO2 Road Policing Strategy--one of the four key behaviours which contribute to avoidable deaths and injury by making collisions more likely, and by making the resultant injuries worse.3 Although the imposition of a specific speed limit is a matter for legisla-tion4 (either primary or in regulations and orders), the enforcement of those limits is an operational matter for the police force involved. Since the Road Traffic Act 1991, increasing reliance has been placed on the use of automatic devices for detecting speeding offences.5 One of these devices, the speed camera, does not enjoy universal popularity; its use tends to evoke strong emotive feelings whether they are of support or condemnation. The camera detects and gathers the initial evidence which is then used to initiate the process of prosecution and punishment.
A fixed penalty ticket procedure is available for offences of speeding detected by a camera, and it is common for the alleged offender never to experience any form of real human interaction with the prosecuting authorities from the moment of offending through to the conclusion, whatever that may be.6 The details of the offence are provided by the output of the machine and it is the machine that proves the facts of the offence. The system is unarguably administratively efficient and cost-effective, but are there any other costs or consequences that follow from relying on an almost totally mechanised and robotic system of law enforcement
Spin 1 inversion: a Majorana tensor force for deuteron alpha scattering
We demonstrate, for the first time, successful S-matrix to potential
inversion for spin one projectiles with non-diagonal yielding a
interaction. The method is a generalization of the
iterative-perturbative, IP, method. We present a test case indicating the
degree of uniqueness of the potential. The method is adapted, using established
procedures, into direct observable to potential inversion, fitting ,
, , and for d + alpha scattering over
a range of energies near 10 MeV. The interaction which we find is
very different from that proposed elsewhere, both real and imaginary parts
being very different for odd and even parity channels.Comment: 7 pages Revtex, 4 ps figure
Searching for modifications to the exponential radioactive decay law with the Cassini spacecraft
Data from the power output of the radioisotope thermoelectric generators
aboard the Cassini spacecraft are used to test the conjecture that small
deviations observed in terrestrial measurements of the exponential radioactive
decay law are correlated with the Earth-Sun distance. No significant deviations
from exponential decay are observed over a range of 0.7 - 1.6 A.U. A 90% Cl
upper limit of 0.84 x 10^-4 is set on a term in the decay rate of Pu-238
proportional to 1/R^2 and 0.99 x 10^-4 for a term proportional to 1/R.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, Late
What Makes a Computation Unconventional?
A coherent mathematical overview of computation and its generalisations is
described. This conceptual framework is sufficient to comfortably host a wide
range of contemporary thinking on embodied computation and its models.Comment: Based on an invited lecture for the 'Symposium on
Natural/Unconventional Computing and Its Philosophical Significance' at the
AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, University of Birmingham, July 2-6, 201
The Use of LANDSAT DCS and Imagery in Reservoir Management and Operation
The author has identified the following significant results. The demonstration, local user terminal, has proven the hypothesis that a relatively inexpensive, automatic, and easily maintained ground receiving station for satellite relayed data is practical for an operational use
The use of ERTS imagery in reservoir management and operation
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
- …