2,670 research outputs found
America’s Toll Roads Heritage: The Achievements of Private Initiative in the 19th Century
Private toll roads shaped and accommodated trade and migration routes, leaving social and political imprints on the communities that debated and supported them. Private road building came and went in waves throughout the 19th century and across the country. All told, between 2,500 and 3,200 companies successfully financed, built, and operated their toll road. Although most of these roads operated for only a fraction of the 100+ period, the combined mileage of private toll roads that operated at any point in time would be in range of 30,000 to 52,000 miles. The paper explores the character, methods, and purposes of the private toll roads, and draws lessons for the privatization of highways today.toll roads; turnpikes; plank roads; privatization; free riding; regulation
Plain Folk in a Rich Man\u27s War: Class and Dissent in Confederate Georgia
Internal opposition Economic disparity was Confederacy\u27s downfall The question of Confederate unity — or the lack of it — has been the subject of a lengthy scholarly debate. Some historians, focusing on the racial and class divisions of the South, argue that internal dissent sign...
The Revenue Imperative
Examining the Federal Financial Policy When I teach my Civil War course, I devote a full lecture to the topic of Union finance. Reflecting conventional wisdom, I tell my students that the nationalistic ideology of the Republican Party helped shape key financial measures, including the ...
Word Cloud Analysis of Early Adopter No-Till Farmer Interviews
We interviewed early adopter no-till farmers in the New England region to assess why they changed tillage practices and what the perceived advantages and disadvantages of doing so were. We then generated word clouds from answers to key interview questions to convey the farmers\u27 experiences. Most of these innovators were influenced to convert to no-till by the success of other exemplary farmers. Advantages noted included reductions in production time and fuel use. The greatest perceived disadvantage was pest management issues caused by cover crop residues. Yield losses were not mentioned, and many of the farmers experienced increased yields. Our findings suggest that Extension staff can increase adoption of new production techniques by identifying and conveying experiences of key farmer leaders
Survey incompleteness and the evolution of the QSO luminosity function
We concentrate on a type of QSO survey which depends on selecting QSO candidates based on combinations of colors. Since QSO's have emission lines and power-law continua, they are expected to yield broadband colors unlike those of stellar photospheres. Previously, the fraction of QSO's expected to be hiding (unselected) within the locus of stellar (U-J, J-F) colors was estimated at about 15 percent. We have now verified that the KK88 survey is at least 11 percent incomplete, but have determined that it may be as much as 34 percent incomplete. The 'missing' QSO's are expected to be predominantly at z less than or = 2.2. We have studied the proper motion and variability properties of all stellar objects with J less than or = 22.5 or F less than or = 21.5 in the SA 57 field which has previously been surveyed with a multicolor QSO search by KK88
2MASS Studies of Differential Reddening Across Three Massive Globular Clusters
J, H, and K_S band data from the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) are used
to study the effects of differential reddening across the three massive
Galactic globular clusters Omega Centauri, NGC 6388, and NGC 6441. Evidence is
found that variable extinction may produce false detections of tidal tails
around Omega Centauri. We also investigate what appears to be relatively strong
differential reddening towards NGC 6388 and NGC 6441, and find that
differential extinction may be exaggerating the need for a metallicity spread
to explain the width of the red giant branches for these two clusters. Finally,
we consider the implications of these results for the connection between
unusual, multipopulation globular clusters and the cores of dwarf spheroidal
galaxies (dSph).Comment: 40 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in Oct. 2003 A
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Mapping The Interstellar Medium With Near-Infrared Diffuse Interstellar Bands
We map the distribution and properties of the Milky Way's interstellar medium as traced by diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) detected in near-infrared stellar spectra from the SDSS-III/APOGEE survey. Focusing exclusively on the strongest DIB in the H band, at lambda similar to 1.527 mu m, we present a projected map of the DIB absorption field in the Galactic plane, using a set of about 60,000 sightlines that reach up to 15 kpc from the Sun and probe up to 30 mag of visual extinction. The strength of this DIB is linearly correlated with dust reddening over three orders of magnitude in both DIB equivalent width (Wpm) and extinction, with a power law index of 1.01 +/- 0.01, a mean relationship of W-DIB/A(v) = 0.1 angstrom mag(-1) and a dispersion of similar to 0.05 angstrom mag(-1) at extinctions characteristic of the Galactic midplane. These properties establish this DIB as a powerful, independent probe of dust extinction over a wide range of Av values. The subset of about 14,000 robustly detected DIB features have a W-DIB distribution that follows an exponential trend. We empirically determine the intrinsic rest wavelength of this transition to be lambda(0) = 15 272.42 angstrom and use it to calculate absolute radial velocities of the carrier, which display the kinematical signature of the rotating Galactic disk. We probe the DIB carrier distribution in three dimensions and show that it can be characterized by an exponential disk model with a scale height of about 100 pc and a scale length of about 5 kpc. Finally, we show that the DIB distribution also traces large-scale Galactic structures, including the Galactic long bar and the warp of the outer disk.NSF Astronomy & Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship AST-1203017NSF AST-1109665Alfred P. Sloan FoundationNational Science FoundationU.S. Department of Energy Office of ScienceUniversity of ArizonaBrazilian Participation GroupBrookhaven National LaboratoryUniversity of CambridgeCarnegie Mellon UniversityUniversity of FloridaFrench Participation GroupGerman Participation GroupHarvard UniversityInstituto de Astrofisica de CanariasMichigan State/Notre Dame/JINA Participation GroupJohns Hopkins UniversityLawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryMax Planck Institute for AstrophysicsMax Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial PhysicsNew Mexico State UniversityNew York UniversityOhio State UniversityPennsylvania State UniversityUniversity of PortsmouthPrinceton UniversitySpanish Participation GroupUniversity of TokyoUniversity of UtahVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of VirginiaUniversity of WashingtonYale UniversitySpanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness AYA-2011-27754McDonald Observator
Absolute Proper Motions to B~22.5: V. Detection of Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Debris in the Direction of the Galactic Anticenter
We have detected a population of predominantly blue (B-V <= 1.1) stars in the
direction l = 167 deg., b = -35 deg. (Kapteyn Selected Area 71) that cannot be
accounted for by standard starcount models. Down to V ~ 20, the colors and
magnitudes of these stars are similar to those of the southern overdensity
detected by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and identified as stripped material
from the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy. We present absolute proper
motions for the stars in SA 71, and we find that the excess blue stars
represent a distinct, kinematically cooler component than the Galactic field,
and in reasonable agreement with predictions of Sgr disruption models. The
density of the excess SA 71 stars at V ~ 18.8 and B-V <=1.1 is within a factor
of two of the density of the SDSS-south Sgr stripped material, and of that
predicted by the Helmi and White disruption model. Three additional anticenter
fields (SA 29, 45 and 118) show very good agreement with standard starcount
models.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJL, accepted for Ap
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