专业八级分类模拟435及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级分类模拟435及答案解析 (总分:58.92,做题时间:90分钟)一、PART READING COMPR(总题数:1,分数:30.00)SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are four passages followed by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the on
2、e that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO. PASSAGE ONE (1) If you drop your laptop computer, a chip built into it will sense the acceleration and protect the delicate moving parts of its hard disk before it hits the ground. A group of researchers led by Jesse Lawr
3、ence of Stanford University are putting the same accelerometer chip to an intriguing new use: detecting earthquakes. They plan to create a network of volunteer laptops that can map out future quakes in far greater detail than traditional seismometers manage. (2) Seismometers are large, expensive bea
4、sts, costing $10,000 or more apiece. They are designed to be exquisitely sensitive to the sort of vibrations an earthquake produces, which means they can pick up tremors that began halfway around the world. By contrast, the accelerometer chips in laptops, which have evolved from those used to detect
5、 when a car is in a collision and thus trigger the release of the airbags, are rather crude devices. They are, however, ubiquitous. Almost all modem laptops have them and they are even finding their way into mobile phones. The iPhone, for example, uses such a chip to detect its orientation so that i
6、t can rotate its display and thus make it easily readable. (3) On its own, an accelerometer chip in a laptop is not very useful for earthquake-detection, as it cannot distinguish between a quake and all sorts of other vibrationsthe user tapping away at the keyboard, for example. But if lots of these
7、 chips are connected to a central server via the internet, their responses can be compared. And if a large number in a particular place register a vibration at almost the same time, it is more likely to be an earthquake than a bunch of users all hitting their space bars. To exploit this group effect
8、, Dr Lawrences Quake-Catcher Network (QCN) employs the same software that is used by the SETIhome project, which aggregates computing power from hundreds of thousands of volunteer computers around the world to analyze radio-telescope signals for signs of extraterrestrial intelligence. (4) Dr Lawrenc
9、e and his colleagues have already demonstrated that the QCN works. It detected a quake near Reno, Nevada, in April, and one near Los Angeles in July. Merely detecting a quake, however, is not the point. Seismometers can do that. To be useful, the QCN needs to be able to do things that seismometers c
10、annot. (5) One of those things is to measure the maximum amount of ground shaking. The sensitivity of seismometers means that strong signals would damage them if they were not designed to clip such signals when they exceed a certain threshold. The price paid is that information about strong, nearby
11、earthquakes is lost. Laptop accelerometers are more robust. Though they cannot, if in America, tell you anything about an earthquake in China, they can sometimes do better than conventional kit when measuring local quakes. (6) The networks second benefit is of sheer numbers. This should allow the co
12、nstruction of far more detailed maps of the up-and-down and side-to-side motions induced by earthquakes. These vary a lot from quake to quake, and that means the damage done by a quake of any given strength is also variable. A better understanding of how movement and damage relate might help both bu
13、ilding design and town planning in earthquake zones. (7) Of course, for that to work, you have to know where each laptop was at the moment of the quake. Ideally, this information would come from a Global Positioning System device fitted within the laptop, but few computers have them at the moment. I
14、n their absence, information automatically supplied about the site of the nearest router (a network device that computers use to connect to the wider internet) gives a rough location. This is imperfect, but pooling the data from lots of laptops means that location errors can be detected statisticall
15、y and erroneous data discarded. (8) If that can be done quickly enough, the QCN could bring a thirdand most valuablebenefit: warning. The speed of internet communication, coupled with a scheme for uploading data from each computer at brief intervals, means that Dr Lawrences network could issue an ea
16、rthquake warning within seconds. That is faster than traditional seismometer networks, which update less regularly, and, above all, is much faster than seismic waves travel. Warnings could thus be broadcast to places the earthquake waves had not yet reached, giving people vital time to find a place
17、of refuge. (9) At the moment, the QCN has about 1,500 participating computers. But, as happened with SETI home, the researchers expect numbers to grow once knowledge of the project spreads: qcn.stanford.edu, for those who want to join in the fun. PASSAGE TWO (1) Damn you, tall people. They block you
18、r view at the movie theater. Theyre a pain to shop for: Who really wants to drag themselves to the Big & Tall to buy Uncle Lurch a pair of extra-long pants? Theyre the ones with better chances of becoming pro basketball players, or supermodels. (2) Squirts probably dont need any more reasons to envy
19、 their longer-limbed neighbors. Unfortunately, a new study just added to the indignity of short people. According to a paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, both men and women who are above average height5 ft. 10 in. for males, 5 ft. 4 in. for femalesreport higher levels of happiness
20、than smaller people. (3) In the study, men who call their lives the worst possible are nearly an inch shorter than the average man. The women most down in the dumps are half an inch smaller, on average, than the average woman. Taller people say they are more content, and are less likely to report a
21、range of negative emotions like sadness and physical pain. Happiness is just one more thing that taller people have going for them, says Angus Deaton, a Princeton economist and co-author of the study, who stands a smug 6 ft. 4 in. (Full disclosure: I, too, am about 6 ft. 4 in., but I will refrain fr
22、om mocking shrimps in this story.) (4) Why are tall people happier? According to Deatons analysis, the result is linked to education and income. The study found that taller people tend to have more education, and thus higher income levels, than shorter people. It follows that the smarter, richer tal
23、l people would be sunnier than their vertically challenged compatriots. Money buys enjoyment and higher life evaluation, says Deaton. It buys off stress, anger, worry and pain. Income is the thing! (5) To gain some real-world insight into these stats, I called the first smart short person I could th
24、ink of, a friend named Milton Lee. Despite what these studies indicate, smart short people do exist. Milt, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, made a killing as a Wall Street trader in the 1990s, but quit finance to chase his dream of becoming a basketball coach. He has trained many NBA pl
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- 专业 分类 模拟 435 答案 解析
