6,246 research outputs found
Taxation and Excess Burden: A Life-Cycle Perspective
A lifetime perspective is appropriate in assessing the welfare implications of government tax policies. Although a number of attempts have been made to ex- amine the excess burden of taxation in life-cycle models, these have tended to ignore the role of human capital accumulation and/or the leisure-income choice. In this paper, we do numerical simulations with a model that takes both of these phenomena into account. We find that under reasonable assumptions, the failure to take into account distortions of human capital decisions produces substantial underestimates of the excess burden of income taxation. In addition, allowing for the endogeneity of human capital increases the efficiency of a personal consumption tax relative to that of an equal yield income tax.
One year of monitoring the Vela pulsar using a Phased Array Feed
We have observed the Vela pulsar for one year using a Phased Array Feed (PAF)
receiver on the 12-metre antenna of the Parkes Test-Bed Facility. These
observations have allowed us to investigate the stability of the PAF
beam-weights over time, to demonstrate that pulsars can be timed over long
periods using PAF technology and to detect and study the most recent glitch
event that occurred on 12 December 2016. The beam-weights are shown to be
stable to 1% on time scales on the order of three weeks. We discuss the
implications of this for monitoring pulsars using PAFs on single dish
telescopes.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in PAS
A Comparative Study of the Magnitude, Frequency and Distribution of Intense Rainfall in the United Kingdom
During the 1960s, a study was made of the magnitude, frequency and distribution of intense rainfall over the UK, employing data from more than 120 daily-read rain gauges covering the period 1911 to 1960. Using the same methodology, that study was recently updated utilizing data for the period 1961 to 2006 for the same gauges, or from those nearby. This paper describes the techniques applied to ensure consistency of data and statistical modelling. It presents a comparison of patterns of extreme rainfalls for the two periods and discusses the changes that have taken place. Most noticeably, increases up to 20% have occurred in the north west of the country and in parts of East Anglia. There have also been changes in other areas, including decreases of the same magnitude over central England. The implications of these changes are considered
The Impact of a Continuing Energy Crisis: Changing Attitudes and Behaviors Regarding Thermostat Setback
A sample of Akron, Ohio SMSA households are utilized to examine thermostat setback as an energy conservation strategy. Socio-economic differences between adopting households are evaluated using discriminant analysis. The results constitute the bases on which our recommendations for future increased use of the thermostat setback strategy are made
How a soybean plant develops
Compiled in this publication are years of research, study and observation o f exactly how a soybean plant develops. Photographs and accompanying text record the findings for each major stage of development in the soybean plant’s life.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/specialreports/1050/thumbnail.jp
Economic Effects of Added Growing Season Rainfall on North Dakota Agriculture
Farm Management, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Peralkaline Silicic Extrusive Rocks: Magma Genesis, Evolution, Plumbing Systems, and Eruption.
Peralkaline silicic extrusive rocks are an important component of the volcanological record. Here we review several aspects of their formation and evolution, including the tectonic settings in which they occur, their main petrological and geochemical features, the magmatic lineages along which they evolve, and the parameters (T, P, fO2, melt water contents) that control the lineages. Particular attention is paid to the composition of the extraordinary melts formed at the lowest temperatures. Various lines of evidence are presented to explain the silica-gaps in some lineages. The partial melting of continental crust and the role of crustal contamination are considered to be of relatively minor importance in their genesis. High P-T experiments aimed at quantifying the lineages are assessed. Geophysical and petrological evidence for the depth and nature of the plumbing systems is presented. Differentiation mechanisms within reservoirs and the ubiquity of the formation of compositional zonation are discussed, as are the timescales involved. Volcanic hazards and the environmental impact of eruptions are described and a brief assessment of the ore potential of the extrusives is given
A phylogeny of birds based on over 1,500 loci collected by target enrichment and high-throughput sequencing
Evolutionary relationships among birds in Neoaves, the clade comprising the
vast majority of avian diversity, have vexed systematists due to the ancient,
rapid radiation of numerous lineages. We applied a new phylogenomic approach to
resolve relationships in Neoaves using target enrichment (sequence capture) and
high-throughput sequencing of ultraconserved elements (UCEs) in avian genomes.
We collected sequence data from UCE loci for 32 members of Neoaves and one
outgroup (chicken) and analyzed data sets that differed in their amount of
missing data. An alignment of 1,541 loci that allowed missing data was 87%
complete and resulted in a highly resolved phylogeny with broad agreement
between the Bayesian and maximum-likelihood (ML) trees. Although results from
the 100% complete matrix of 416 UCE loci were similar, the Bayesian and ML
trees differed to a greater extent in this analysis, suggesting that increasing
from 416 to 1,541 loci led to increased stability and resolution of the tree.
Novel results of our study include surprisingly close relationships between
phenotypically divergent bird families, such as tropicbirds (Phaethontidae) and
the sunbittern (Eurypygidae) as well as between bustards (Otididae) and turacos
(Musophagidae). This phylogeny bolsters support for monophyletic waterbird and
landbird clades and also strongly supports controversial results from previous
studies, including the sister relationship between passerines and parrots and
the non-monophyly of raptorial birds in the hawk and falcon families. Although
significant challenges remain to fully resolving some of the deep relationships
in Neoaves, especially among lineages outside the waterbirds and landbirds,
this study suggests that increased data will yield an increasingly resolved
avian phylogeny.Comment: 30 pages, 1 table, 4 figures, 1 supplementary table, 3 supplementary
figure
The Ursinus Weekly, April 3, 1903
Like the ripples • Home rule for cities • Alumni notes • Among the colleges • Philadelphia letter • Racquet lovers meet • Locals • Zwinglian anniversary • Audubon science program • Athleticshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/3081/thumbnail.jp
The Ursinus Weekly, December 19, 1902
Literary department: Poetry and philosophy • Immensee • A pipe dream • Philadelphia letter • Schaff Society • Among the colleges • National Civil Service Reform League • Alumni notes • Week in Congresshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/3068/thumbnail.jp
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