235 research outputs found
The Geography of Enclosure in Pre-Revolutionary European Russia-Tver, Tula and Samara Provinces.
The Stolypin Land Reform passed in 1906 provided for the
enclosure of the land of individual peasant households in European
Russia. The political, social and legal aspects of the Reform have
been studied in detail in the past but little attention has been
focused on the actual results the Reform achieved on the ground. It
is the author's contention that examination of the results of the
Reform is essential if conclusions are to be reached about the
significance of the enclosure movement to the changes taking place
during the inter-revolutionary period in Russia and to the 1917
Revolution itself. The study of the enclosure movement in Russia is
also relevant to the more general discussion among geographers of
agrarian change and revolutions.
In the thesis, with reference to three provinces selected
from different functional regions of pre-Revolutionary Russia, the
pattern of adoption of enclosure is described and an attempt made to
explain the patterns. In the first part the number of peasant
households that enclosed their land, the method by which enclosure
was effected and the resultant type of farming units formed in the
sample provinces is investigated and hypotheses explaining the patterns
observed tested. It was found that the peasants' response to the
Reform varied considerably and that this was due to differences in the
socio-economic composition of the peasant class, the level of
agricultural technique, the existing spatial organisation of the land
and ecological conditions. In the second part the post-enclosure
situation is examined, attention being focused in particular on the
type of farming system that evolved on the newly formed enclosed farms.
It was found that, contrary to the expectations of the authors of the
enclosure legislation, the improvements of farming in the way of
intensification was not widespread on farms after enclosure. The
improvement of farming was found to be dependent more upon the resources
possessed by individual peasant farmers than upon the system of tenure
and spatial organisation of the land
Post-Soviet studies: crisis of concepts, conventions, and compromises
The roundtable is a response to the state of distress in which many researchers of postSoviet processes, spaces, and transformations found themselves after the start of the war in Ukraine in February 2022. The nature of this anguish can be found, first of all, in the realization of the irreversibility of the events. But it also captured social scientists’ professional sphere. The crisis of post-Soviet studies, which had already been discussed for a long time, has manifested itself in full force. Many of the foundational, widely accepted concepts that were used to explaine the post-Soviet transformations—and seemed dependable—have been discredited or called into question. The roundtable, which took place in Helsinki in October 2022, was not so naive as to seek to solve any problems. The discussion that took place was an attempt to feel out and confront the underlying concepts and assumptions that have failed, as well as an attempt to capture scholarly reflections on the difficult situation that we are living through now
Gridded and direct Epoch of Reionisation bispectrum estimates using the Murchison Widefield Array
We apply two methods to estimate the 21~cm bispectrum from data taken within
the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) project of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA).
Using data acquired with the Phase II compact array allows a direct bispectrum
estimate to be undertaken on the multiple redundantly-spaced triangles of
antenna tiles, as well as an estimate based on data gridded to the -plane.
The direct and gridded bispectrum estimators are applied to 21 hours of
high-band (167--197~MHz; =6.2--7.5) data from the 2016 and 2017 observing
seasons. Analytic predictions for the bispectrum bias and variance for point
source foregrounds are derived. We compare the output of these approaches, the
foreground contribution to the signal, and future prospects for measuring the
bispectra with redundant and non-redundant arrays. We find that some triangle
configurations yield bispectrum estimates that are consistent with the expected
noise level after 10 hours, while equilateral configurations are strongly
foreground-dominated. Careful choice of triangle configurations may be made to
reduce foreground bias that hinders power spectrum estimators, and the 21~cm
bispectrum may be accessible in less time than the 21~cm power spectrum for
some wave modes, with detections in hundreds of hours.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Sofia 2 - An automated, parallel H i source finding pipeline for the WALLABY survey
We present SoFiA 2, the fully automated 3D source finding pipeline for the
WALLABY extragalactic HI survey with the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP).
SoFiA 2 is a reimplementation of parts of the original SoFiA pipeline in the C
programming language and makes use of OpenMP for multi-threading of the most
time-critical algorithms. In addition, we have developed a parallel framework
called SoFiA-X that allows the processing of large data cubes to be split
across multiple computing nodes. As a result of these efforts, SoFiA 2 is
substantially faster and comes with a much reduced memory footprint compared to
its predecessor, thus allowing the large WALLABY data volumes of hundreds of
gigabytes of imaging data per epoch to be processed in real-time. The source
code has been made publicly available to the entire community under an
open-source licence. Performance tests using mock galaxies injected into
genuine ASKAP data suggest that in the absence of significant imaging artefacts
SoFiA 2 is capable of achieving near-100% completeness and reliability above an
integrated signal-to-noise ratio of about 5-6. We also demonstrate that SoFiA 2
generally recovers the location, integrated flux and w20 line width of galaxies
with high accuracy. Other parameters, including the peak flux density and w50
line width, are more strongly biased due to the influence of the noise on the
measurement. In addition, very faint galaxies below an integrated
signal-to-noise ratio of about 10 may get broken up into multiple components,
thus requiring a strategy to identify fragmented sources and ensure that they
do not affect the integrity of any scientific analysis based on the SoFiA 2
output.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Murchison Widefield Array: the Square Kilometre Array Precursor at low radio frequencies
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is one of three Square Kilometre Array
Precursor telescopes and is located at the Murchison Radio-astronomy
Observatory in the Murchison Shire of the mid-west of Western Australia, a
location chosen for its extremely low levels of radio frequency interference.
The MWA operates at low radio frequencies, 80-300 MHz, with a processed
bandwidth of 30.72 MHz for both linear polarisations, and consists of 128
aperture arrays (known as tiles) distributed over a ~3 km diameter area. Novel
hybrid hardware/software correlation and a real-time imaging and calibration
systems comprise the MWA signal processing backend. In this paper the as-built
MWA is described both at a system and sub-system level, the expected
performance of the array is presented, and the science goals of the instrument
are summarised.Comment: Submitted to PASA. 11 figures, 2 table
Calibration database for the Murchison Widefield Array All-Sky Virtual Observatory
We present a calibration component for the Murchison Widefield Array All-Sky
Virtual Observatory (MWA ASVO) utilising a newly developed PostgreSQL database
of calibration solutions. Since its inauguration in 2013, the MWA has recorded
over thirty-four petabytes of data archived at the Pawsey Supercomputing
Centre. According to the MWA Data Access policy, data become publicly available
eighteen months after collection. Therefore, most of the archival data are now
available to the public. Access to public data was provided in 2017 via the MWA
ASVO interface, which allowed researchers worldwide to download MWA
uncalibrated data in standard radio astronomy data formats (CASA measurement
sets or UV FITS files). The addition of the MWA ASVO calibration feature opens
a new, powerful avenue for researchers without a detailed knowledge of the MWA
telescope and data processing to download calibrated visibility data and create
images using standard radio-astronomy software packages. In order to populate
the database with calibration solutions from the last six years we developed
fully automated pipelines. A near-real-time pipeline has been used to process
new calibration observations as soon as they are collected and upload
calibration solutions to the database, which enables monitoring of the
interferometric performance of the telescope. Based on this database we present
an analysis of the stability of the MWA calibration solutions over long time
intervals.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication in PAS
Geographically touring the eastern bloc: British geography, travel cultures and the Cold War
This paper considers the role of travel in the generation of geographical knowledge of the eastern bloc by British geographers. Based on oral history and surveys of published work, the paper examines the roles of three kinds of travel experience: individual private travels, tours via state tourist agencies, and tours by academic delegations. Examples are drawn from across the eastern bloc, including the USSR, Poland, Romania, East Germany and Albania. The relationship between travel and publication is addressed, notably within textbooks, and in the Geographical Magazine. The study argues for the extension of accounts of cultures of geographical travel, and seeks to supplement the existing historiography of Cold War geography
Intergenerational equity in municipal accounting: New Zealand 1910s
Accounting for fixed assets by municipalities has been discussed in the accounting history literature previously. This paper addresses two issues related to accounting for fixed assets not previously discussed; the influence of the principle of intergenerational equity on local government accounting, and the influence of users of accounting information in accounting policy making in government accounting. The paper identifies that users of accounting information have had significant influence in a debate on government accounting policy, and that the principle of intergenerational equity was given a position of high importance in the debate, but not an unchallengeable position. The motivation of the users of accounting information to engage in the debates is identified as a form of civic duty, which is consistent with the ethical imperative in ensuring intergenerational equity
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