76,548 research outputs found
\u3cem\u3eWillson v. Black-Bird Creek Marsh Co.\u3c/em\u3e, 25 U.S. 245 (1829): An Early Test of the Dormant Commerce Clause
In 1822, Delaware authorized the Blackbird Creek Marsh Company to bank and drain the Blackbird Creek in New Castle County. Subsequently, Thompson Wilson and others destroyed the structure built by the marsh company. The marsh company subsequently sued Mr. Wilson for the damage to its property. The parties eventually appealed their dispute to the Supreme Court of the United States. The Court held that Delaware’s authorization to bank and dam the creek did not conflict with the federal government’s exclusive authority to regulate commerce between the several states. Ultimately, the Court decided Willson in a manner inconsistent with its earlier decision in Gibbons v. Ogden and subsequent decisions regarding navigation of U.S. waters. Additionally, Mr. Wilson likely chose not to bring a Fifth Amendment takings claim due to the lack of legal support for such a claim at the time
A Cultural Heritage Forum Celebrating Technological Innovation at Station X
We aim to encourage and support public participation in heritage through the development of Cultural Heritage Forums, a kind of cultural web portal that enables active participation of communities of interest in a way that complements rather than replaces visits to physical cultural institutions. The cultural heritage forum described here (Station X) is concerned with promoting an understanding of technology innovation in the areas of computing and cryptography. We propose a number of scenarios concerning how the forum can be designed, drawing on our earlier work in using knowledge modelling and text analysis to support the exploration of digital resources
k_T factorization is violated in production of high-transverse-momentum particles in hadron-hadron collisions
We show that hard-scattering factorization is violated in the production of
high-p_T hadrons in hadron-hadron collisions, in the case that the hadrons are
back-to-back, so that k_T factorization is to be used. The explicit
counterexample that we construct is for the single-spin asymmetry with one beam
transversely polarized. The Sivers function needed here has particular
sensitivity to the Wilson lines in the parton densities. We use a greatly
simplified model theory to make the breakdown of factorization easy to check
explicitly. But the counterexample implies that standard arguments for
factorization fail not just for the single-spin asymmetry but for the
unpolarized cross section for back-to-back hadron production in QCD in
hadron-hadron collisions. This is unlike corresponding cases in e^+e^-
annihilation, Drell-Yan, and deeply inelastic scattering. Moreover, the result
endangers factorization for more general hadroproduction processes.Comment: 10 pages. V. 2: Title change, misprints and minor corrections, as in
journal versio
Inclusive Diffraction at HERA
New precision measurements of inclusive diffractive deep-inelastic ep
scattering interactions, performed by the H1 and ZEUS collaborations at the
HERA collider, are discussed. A new set of diffractive parton distributions,
determined from recent high precision H1 data, is presented.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the 31st Intl. Conference on
High Energy Physics ICHEP 2002, Amsterdam, July 200
General Mass Scheme for Jet Production in DIS
We propose a method for calculating DIS jet production cross sections in QCD
at NLO accuracy with consistent treatment of heavy quarks. The scheme relies on
the dipole subtraction method for jets, which we extend to all possible initial
state splittings with heavy partons, so that the Aivazis-Collins-Olness-Tung
massive collinear factorization scheme (ACOT) can be applied. As a first check
of the formalism we recover the ACOT result for the heavy quark structure
function using a dedicated Monte Carlo program.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Effects of QCD Resummation on Distributions of Leptons from the Decay of Electroweak Vector Bosons
We study the distributions of leptons from the decay of electroweak vector
bosons produced in hadron collisions. The effects of the initial state multiple
soft-gluon emission, using the Collins--Soper resummation formalism, are
included. The resummed results are compared with the next-to-leading-order
results for the distributions of the transverse momentum, rapidity asymmetry,
and azimuthal angle of the decay leptons.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures uuencoded, LaTeX, uses epsf.tex for figures. (Was
replaced on 5/2/95 because of mailer problems.
- …
