[外语类试卷]大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷53及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷 53及答案与解析 Section C 0 One of the simplest and best known kinds of crystal is the ionic salt, of which a typical example is sodium chloride, or ordinary table salt. The fundamental components of an ionic salt are ions: atoms or molecules that have become electrically charged by gain
2、ing or losing one more electrons. In forming sodium chloride, for example, sodium atoms give up an electron(thereby becoming positively charged)and chlorine atoms gain an electron(thereby becoming negatively charged). The ions are attracted to one another by their opposite charges, and they stack to
3、gether compactly, like tightly packed spheres. Recently, scientists at Michigan State University created a new kind of crystal called an electride. In electrides, the anions(negative ions)are completely replaced by electrons, which are trapped in naturally formed cavities within a framework of regul
4、arly stacked cations(positive ions). Electrides are the first examples of ionic salts in which all these anionic sites are occupied solely by electrons. Unlike other types of anions, anionic electrons do not behave as if they were simple charged spheres. In particular, because of their low mass and
5、their tendency to interact with one another over great distances, they cannot be “pinned down“ to any one location. Instead, they wander close to and among the atoms lining the cavity and interact with electrons in nearby cavities, perhaps changing places with them. The properties of an electride de
6、pend largely on the distance between the cavities that hold trapped electrons. When the trapped electrons are far apart, they do not interact strongly, and so behave somewhat like an array of isolated negative charges. When they are closer together, they begin to display properties associated with l
7、arge ensembles of identical particles. When they are still closer, the ensemble properties dominate and the electrons “delocalize“: they are no longer tightly bound within individual cavities but are more or less free to pass through the spaces within the framework of positive ions. By synthesizing
8、electrides from a variety of materials, one can vary the geometry of the anionic cavities and their relation to the surrounding cations. The resulting properties may make it possible for electrides to become a basis for economically useful new materials and devices. For instance, because the electro
9、ns in some electrides are very weakly bound, these crystals could be effective as photosensitive detectors, in which an impinging photon liberates an electron, resulting in a small electric current. The same weak binding could also make electrides useful in solar energy converters and as cathodes in
10、 batteries. One obstacle is the tendency of electrides to decompose through reaction with air and water. Researchers are seeking ways to increase their stability. 1 The text is primarily concerned with discussing_. ( A) a way to isolate electrons ( B) the characteristics of a new kind of crystal ( C
11、) the structure of an ionic salt ( D) commercial uses for electrides 2 In the first paragraph, the author is primarily concerned with_. ( A) introducing a variant on the standard atomic theory ( B) describing how chlorine atoms can become negatively charged ( C) providing background for the technica
12、l discussion to follow ( D) describing some early research at Michigan State University 3 According to the text, the defining characteristic of an electride is which of the following? ( A) Its positive is of particularly low mass. ( B) Its ions possess identical electrical charges. ( C) It contains
13、a framework of regularly stacked ions. ( D) Its negative ions consist solely of electrons. 4 It can be inferred from the text that anions behaving as “simple charged spheres“(Para.3)could be expected to_. ( A) readily lose electrons and become positively charged ( B) move freely in and out of their
14、cavities ( C) respond to photons by liberating electrons ( D) remain fixed relative to their cations 5 With which of the following statements regarding electrides would the author most likely agree? ( A) They have proven themselves to be of great commercial value. ( B) Their future commercial value
15、is promising but uncertain. ( C) They are interesting but of no practical value. ( D) They have commercial value mainly in solar energy applications. 5 Before 1965 many scientists pictured the circulation of the oceans water mass as consisting of large, slow-moving currents, such as the Gulf Stream.
16、 That view, based on 100 years of observations made around the globe, produced only a rough approximation of the true circulation. But in the 1950s and the 1960s, researchers began to employ newly developed techniques and equipment, including subsurface floats that move with ocean currents and emit
17、identification signals, and ocean current meters that record data for months at fixed locations in the ocean. These instruments disclosed an unexpected level of variability in the deep ocean. Rather than being characterized by smooth, large-scale currents that change seasonally(if at all), the seas
18、are dominated by what oceanographers call mesoscale fields: fluctuating, energetic flows whose velocity can reach ten times the mean velocity of the major currents. Mesoscale phenomena the oceanic analogue of weather systems often extend to distances of 100 kilometers and persist for 100 days(weathe
19、r systems generally extend about 1,000 kilometers and last 3 to 5 days in any given area). More than 90 percent of the kinetic energy of the entire ocean may be accounted for by mesoscale variability rather than by large scale currents. Mesoscale phenomena may, in fact, play a significant role in oc
20、eanic mixing, air-sea interactions, and occasional but far-reaching climatic events such as El Nino, the atmospheric-oceanic disturbance in the equatorial Pacific that affects global weather patterns. Unfortunately, it is not feasible to use conventional techniques to measure mesoscale fields. To me
21、asure them properly, monitoring equipment would have to be laid out on a grid at intervals of at most 50 kilometers, with sensors at each grid point lowered deep in the ocean and kept there for many months. Because using these techniques would be prohibitively expensive and time consuming, it was pr
22、oposed in 1979 that tomography be adapted to measuring the physical properties of the ocean. In medical tomography X-rays map the human bodys density variations(and hence internal organs); the information from the X-rays, transmitted through the body along many different paths, is recombined to form
23、 three-dimensional images of the body s interior. It is primarily that this multiplicative increase in data obtained from the multipath transmission of signals that accounts for oceanographers attraction to tomography: it allows the measurement of vast areas with relatively few instruments. Research
24、ers reasoned that low-frequency sound waves, because they are so well described mathematically and because even small perturbations in emitted sound waves can be detected, could be transmitted through the ocean over many different paths and that the properties of the oceans interior its temperature,
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