9,620 research outputs found

    Proposition 13 and the California Fiscal Shell Game

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    We study the effects of California’s tax and expenditure limitations, especially Proposition 13. We find that Proposition 13 was indeed effective at reducing both ad valorem property taxes per capita and total state and local taxes per capita, at least in the short run. We further argue that there have been unintended second- ary effects that have resulted in an increased tax burden, undermining the aims of Proposition 13. To circumvent the limits imposed by Proposition 13, the state has drastically increased nonguaranteed debt, has privatized the public fisc, and has devolved the authority to lay and collect taxes and to spend the proceeds so gained. The devolution of authority has been among the swiftest growing aspects of government finance in California, to a far greater extent than in other states. Lastly, we argue that the new tax and spending authorities that have been created to circumvent Proposition 13 have led to a reduction in government transparency and accountability and pose an increasing threat to our democracy

    Cheating on Their Taxes: When Are Tax Limitations Effective at Limiting State Taxes, Expenditures, and Budgets?

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    At a Seminar arranged by the Ecological Research Committee on October 30 , 1967, Dr. Svante Odén discussed the acidity and sulphur conditions over Europe and the consequensos to soils, surfaco waters and biological systems. In 1952 a European network of stations for atmospheric chemistry was organized by the International Meteorological Institute , Stockholm (Fig. 1). Odén and Dr. Torsten Ahl, Uppsala, later complemented the network in Scandinavia with stations for surface water chemistry (Fig. 3). At the atmospheric chemical network measurements of different element s havc been made for about 15 years. Changes of the atmospheric chemical climate can now be evaluated from the dat a, showing either positive or negative trends (Fig. 2 , 20 and 21). The sulphur content of air (Fig. 18) and of precipitation (Fig. 17 ) shows a characteristic pattern for Europe, indicating a close rolationship to air pollution from citiesand industrios. The rising sulphur content in the atmosphere are undoubtedly connected with the incrcasing use of sulphurous f'uels as a suostitute for coke and coal. The increasing addition of sulphur compounds t o the atmosphere (mainly as SO2 and H2S ) leads to an incrcase of the acidity o f the precipitation. Monthly data from threc stations conccrning pH are given (Fig. 4 , 5 and 6) . With a few exceptions the pH valuos at the network stations are dccrcasing with time (Fig. 9, 10 and 11) . The ratc of decrcasc of the 1) Department of Pedology, Agricultural College of Sweden, Uppsala 2) Swedish Natural Science Research Council , Sveavägen 166, Stockholm 23 pH values shows a geographical distribution pattern (Fig. 12), which can be expected from the intensity of industrial activities. The acidity of the yearly precipitation in Europe is mapped for 1958 (Fig. 13) , 1962 (Fig. 14) and 1965 (Fig. 15). In 1958 values below pH 5 were to be found only in a limited area over The Netherlands. As is shown on the succceding maps, this area has since spread over Central Europe. The other acid zones are also procecding and in 1965 the isoline for pH 4.5 had reached the Southern part of Sweden. In 1967 the pH values for Central Sweden had decreased to approx. 4.3. A study of the wind trajectories (Fig. 8) shows, that this low pH value is partly a result of a transport of air pollutants from source to sink areas. "The Scandinavian Sulphur Depression" (Fig. 2 2) indicates that a complicated hydrometeorological mechanism is involved in the distributional pattern. In 1965 almost a thousand Scandinavian lake and river waters were chemically investigatcd by Ahl and Odén. For considerable areas the pH-values were found to be so low as to affect fish life. The mapping of pH (Fig. 2 5 ) corresponds with that for Magnesium (Fig. 26) indicating a depletion of eations of the soil complex .. This is also reflected by thc long term changes of the concentration af anions ( so4) and cations (Ca) in river systems (Fig. 27 a and b). Last summer a special study o f the acidity of 600 lakes in Western Scandinavia was made by Dr. E . Eriksson. The results showed that since 1959 the pH-values have boen reduced on an average by 0.4 units. The acid precipitation will sooner or later acidify the river systers. The change in pH will depend, among others, on the buffer capacity of the catchment area. However, negative trends have already appeared in both large river systems (Fig. 23) and small ones (Fig. 24). The acidification of natural waters can be a threat to aquatic life. Organisms cannot normally exist in water with pH-values below 4.0. Certain valuable fish, such as salmon, are threatened at pH 5.5 and the catch of salrnon in Mörrumsån is continuously decreasing (Fig. 28 ). Soils may also be affected if the supply of nautralizing alkalis are depleted or poor. An impoverished forest arowth rate could be the result (Fig. 30). The important point is, according to Odén, that the balance of nature is considerably disturbed by the present atmospheric pollution of sulphuric acid and other acidifying compounds such as nitric and hydrochloric acid. An atmospheric chemical atlas of Europe containing data on air as well as precipitation is being prepared on the basis of existing data. * * * In the discussion that followed Odéns paper f'urther evidence of extensive fish kill in acid waters was given. Two speakers emphasized the economic aspects of the heavy damage that is caused each year by acid corrosion of metals, now amounting to 2 % of our gross national product, and the economic as well as cultural valuecs that are lost by the deterioration of buildnings and stone ornaments

    On the Optimization of Visualizations of Complex Phenomena

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    The problem of perceptually optimizing complex visualizations is a difficult one, involving perceptual as well as aesthetic issues. In our experience, controlled experiments are quite limited in their ability to uncover interrelationships among visualization parameters, and thus may not be the most useful way to develop rules-of-thumb or theory to guide the production of high-quality visualizations. In this paper, we propose a new experimental approach to optimizing visualization quality that integrates some of the strong points of controlled experiments with methods more suited to investigating complex highly-coupled phenomena. We use human-in-the-loop experiments to search through visualization parameter space, generating large databases of rated visualization solutions. This is followed by data mining to extract results such as exemplar visualizations, guidelines for producing visualizations, and hypotheses about strategies leading to strong visualizations. The approach can easily address both perceptual and aesthetic concerns, and can handle complex parameter interactions. We suggest a genetic algorithm as a valuable way of guiding the human-in-the-loop search through visualization parameter space. We describe our methods for using clustering, histogramming, principal component analysis, and neural networks for data mining. The experimental approach is illustrated with a study of the problem of optimal texturing for viewing layered surfaces so that both surfaces are maximally observable

    On the residual and profinite closures of commensurated subgroups

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    The residual closure of a subgroup HH of a group GG is the intersection of all virtually normal subgroups of GG containing HH. We show that if GG is generated by finitely many cosets of HH and if HH is commensurated, then the residual closure of HH in GG is virtually normal. This implies that separable commensurated subgroups of finitely generated groups are virtually normal. A stream of applications to separable subgroups, polycyclic groups, residually finite groups, groups acting on trees, lattices in products of trees and just-infinite groups then flows from this main result.Comment: 22 page

    Physiological Electrical Signals Promote Chain Migration of Neuroblasts by Up-Regulating P2Y1 Purinergic Receptors and Enhancing Cell Adhesion

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    Acknowledgments This work was supported by a grant from NHS Grampian. Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are creditedPeer reviewedPublisher PD

    Our Dark Matter Stopping in the Earth

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    We have worked for some time on a model for dark matter, in which dark matter consists of small bubbles of a new speculated type of vacuum, which are pumped up by some ordinary matter such as diamond, so as to resist the pressure of the domain wall separating the two vacua. Here we put forward thoughts on, how such macroscopic pearls would have their surrounding dust cleaned off passing through the atmosphere and the Earth, and what their distribution would be as a function of the depth of their stopping point and the distribution of the radiation emitted from them. In our model we assume that they radiate 3.5 keV electrons and photons, after having been excited during their passage into the Earth. The purpose of such an estimation of the radiation distribution is to explain the truly mysterious fact that, among all the underground experiments seeking dark matter colliding with the Earth material, only the DAMA-LIBRA experiment has seen any evidence of dark matter. This is an experiment based on solid NaI scintillators and is rather deep at 1400 m. It is our point that we can arrange the main radiation to appear in the relatively deep DAMA- LIBRA site, and explain that the dark matter pearls cannot stop in a fluid, such as xenon in the xenon based experiments.Comment: 26th Work Shop " What comes beyond the Standard Models'' in Bled. July 10. to 1

    Large N Scaling Behavior of the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick Model

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    We introduce a novel semiclassical approach to the Lipkin model. In this way the well-known phase transition arising at the critical value of the coupling is intuitively understood. New results -- showing for strong couplings the existence of a threshold energy which separates deformed from undeformed states as well as the divergence of the density of states at the threshold energy -- are explained straightforwardly and in quantitative terms by the appearance of a double well structure in a classical system corresponding to the Lipkin model. Previously unnoticed features of the eigenstates near the threshold energy are also predicted and found to hold.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PR

    Order in de Broglie - Bohm quantum mechanics

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    A usual assumption in the so-called {\it de Broglie - Bohm} approach to quantum dynamics is that the quantum trajectories subject to typical `guiding' wavefunctions turn to be quite irregular, i.e. {\it chaotic} (in the dynamical systems' sense). In the present paper, we consider mainly cases in which the quantum trajectories are {\it ordered}, i.e. they have zero Lyapunov characteristic numbers. We use perturbative methods to establish the existence of such trajectories from a theoretical point of view, while we analyze their properties via numerical experiments. Using a 2D harmonic oscillator system, we first establish conditions under which a trajectory can be shown to avoid close encounters with a moving nodal point, thus avoiding the source of chaos in this system. We then consider series expansions for trajectories both in the interior and the exterior of the domain covered by nodal lines, probing the domain of convergence as well as how successful the series are in comparison with numerical computations or regular trajectories. We then examine a H\'{e}non - Heiles system possessing regular trajectories, thus generalizing previous results. Finally, we explore a key issue of physical interest in the context of the de Broglie - Bohm formalism, namely the influence of order in the so-called {\it quantum relaxation} effect. We show that the existence of regular trajectories poses restrictions to the quantum relaxation process, and we give examples in which the relaxation is suppressed even when we consider initial ensembles of only chaotic trajectories, provided, however, that the system as a whole is characterized by a certain degree of order.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figure
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