3,280 research outputs found
Apparatus for aiding a pilot in avoiding a midair collision between aircraft
An apparatus for aiding a pilot in avoiding a midair collision between aircraft is described. A protected aircraft carries a transmitter, a transponder, a receiver, and a data processor; and an intruding cooperating aircraft carries a transponder. The transmitter of the protected aircraft continuously transmits a signal to the transponders of all intruding aircraft. The transponder of each of the intruding aircraft adds the altitude of the intruding aircraft to the signal and transmits it back to the receiver of the protected aircraft. The receiver selects only the signal from the most hazardous intruding aircraft and applies it to the data processor. From this selected signal the data processor determines the closing velocity between the protected and intruding aircraft, the range between the two aircraft, their altitude difference and the time to a possible collision
Public policies for the working poor: The earned income tax credit versus minimum wage legislation
This paper documents the declining relationship between low hourly wages and low household income over the last half-century and how this has reduced the share of minimum wage workers who live in poor households. It then compares recent and prospective increases in the earned income tax credit (EITC) and the minimum wage as methods of increasing the labor earnings of poor workers. Data from the Current Population Survey (CPS) are used to simulate the effects of both programs. Increases in the EITC between 1989 and 1992 delivered a much larger proportion of a given dollar of benefits to the poor than did increases in the minimum wage from 4.25. Scheduled increases in the EITC through 1996 will also do far more for the working poor than raising the minimum wage.
Dissipative transformation of non-nucleated dwarf galaxies into nucleated systems
Recent photometric observations by the {\it Hubble Space Telescope (HST)}
have revealed the physical properties of stellar galactic nuclei in nucleated
dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster of galaxies. In order to elucidate the
formation processes of nucleated dwarfs, we numerically investigate gas
dynamics, star formation, and chemical evolution within the central 1 kpc of
gas disks embedded within the galactic stellar components of non-nucleated
dwarfs. We find that high density, compact stellar systems can be formed in the
central regions of dwarfs as a result of dissipative, repeated merging of
massive stellar and gaseous clumps developed from nuclear gaseous spiral arms
as a result of local gravitational instability. The central stellar components
are found to have stellar masses which are typically 5% of their host dwarfs
and show very flattened shapes, rotational kinematics, and central velocity
dispersions significantly smaller than those of their host dwarfs. We also find
that more massive dwarfs can develop more massive, more metal-rich, and higher
density stellar systems in their central regions, because star formation and
chemical enrichment proceed more efficiently owing to the less dramatic
suppression of star formation by supernovae feedback effects in more massive
dwarfs. Based on these results, we suggest that gas-rich, non-nucleated dwarfs
can be transformed into nucleated ones as a result of dissipative gas dynamics
in their central regions. We discuss the origin of the observed correlations
between physical properties of stellar galactic nuclei and those of their host
galaxies.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures (1 color), ApJL in pres
Cluster Galaxy Evolution from a New Sample of Galaxy Clusters at 0.3 < z < 0.9
(Abridged) We analyze photometry and spectroscopy of a sample of 63 clusters
at 0.3<z<0.9 drawn from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey to empirically
constrain models of cluster galaxy evolution. Specifically, by combining data
on our clusters with those from the literature we parametrize the redshift
dependence of 1) M*_I in the observed frame; 2) the V-I color of the E/S0 red
sequence in the observed frames; and 3) the I-K' color of the E/S0 red sequence
in the observed frame. Using the peak surface brightness of the cluster
detection, S, as a proxy for cluster mass, we find no correlation between S and
M* or the location of the red envelope in V-I. We suggest that these
observations can be explained with a model in which luminous early type
galaxies (or more precisely, the progenitors of current day luminous early type
galaxies) form the bulk of their stellar populations at high redshift (>~ 5)
and in which many of these galaxies, if not all, accrete mass either in the
form of evolved stellar populations or gas that causes only a short term
episode of star formation at lower redshifts (1.5 < z < 2). Our data are too
crude to reach conclusions regarding the evolutionary state of any particular
cluster or to investigate whether the morphological evolution of galaxies
matches the simple scenario we discuss, but the statistical nature of this
study suggests that the observed evolutionary trends are universal in massive
clusters.Comment: 35 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
Resistance and Propulsion Test Results on Two Cb=0.60 Merchant Hull Geosims
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96607/1/39015087358712.pd
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