Passenger mileage

1.(Railroads) Passenger miles collectively; the total number of miles traveled by passengers on a railroad during a given period.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
At the initial stage, seven indicators, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, passenger turnover, freight volume, average freight mileage, freight turnover, and number of employed persons, were included for the analysis.
The communality value of all the seven indicators, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, passenger turnover, freight volume, average freight mileage, freight turnover, and number of employed persons, was above 80%, and it indicates that all the seven indicators have greater impact in the development of railway industry.
Table 5 shows that freight turnover, freight volume, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, and number of employed persons load heavily on the first factor and the other two variables, passenger turnover and average freight mileage, load on the second factor.
where [X.sub.1], [X.sub.2], ..., [X.sub.7] are freight turnover, freight volume, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, number of employed persons, passenger turnover, and average freight mileage, respectively, and Y value represents the annual level of development of railway industry.
Seven variables, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, passenger turnover, freight volume, average freight mileage, freight turnover, and number of employed persons, were used for factor analysis to calculate the comprehensive utility curve of Pakistan railway industry over the years from the year 1950 to 2015, as shown in Figure 5.
Principal component analysis was used to calculate the eigenvalues and contribution rates of the common factors and seven indicators, passenger volume, average passenger mileage, passenger turnover, freight volume, average freight mileage, freight turnover, and number of employed persons, were included for the analysis.
Eighty- six per cent of passenger mileage is now by car and van - 33 per cent more than a decade ago.
In fact the real battle had been lost in the 1920s: in 1922 automobile travel was only 25 percent of the rail passenger mileage, but five years later "people travelled four times as much in cars as they did in trains' (p.
Full browser ?