[外语类试卷]阅读理解模拟试卷5及答案与解析.doc
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1、阅读理解模拟试卷 5及答案与解析 0 The Discovery of Astronomers The discovery of planets around distant stars has become like space-shuttle launchesnewsworthy but just barely. With some 50 extrasolar planets under their belt, astronomers have to announce something reafly strange to get anyones attention. Last week
2、they did just that. Standing in front of colleagues and reporters at the American Astronomical Societys semiannual meeting in San Diego, the worlds premier planet-hunting team astronomer Geoffrey Marcy of the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues presented not one but two remarkable
3、 finds. The first is a pair of planets, each about the mass of Jupiter, that whirl around their home star 15 light-years from Earth in perfect lockstep. One takes 30 days to complete an orbit, the other exactly twice as long. Nobody has ever seen such a configuration. But the second discovery is far
4、 stranger a solar system 123 light-years away, in the constellation Serpens, that harbors one “ ordinary“ planet and another so huge 17 times as massive as Jupiter that nobody can quitefigure out what it can be. It is, says Marcy, “a bit frightening. “ Whats frightening is that these discoveries mak
5、e it clear how little astronomers know about planets and they add to the dawning realization that our solar system and by implication Planet Earth may be a cosmic oddball. For years theorists figured that other stars would have planets more or less like the ones going around the sun. But starting wi
6、th the 1995 discovery of the first extrasolar planet a gassy monster like Jupiter but orbiting seven times as close to its star as Mercury orbits around our sun each new find has seemed stranger than the last. Searchers have found more “hot Jupi-ters“ like that first discovery. These include huge pl
7、anets that career around their stars not in circular orbits but in elongated ones; their gravity would send any Earthlike neighbors flying off into space. Says Princeton astronomer Scott Tremaine: “Not a single prediction for what wed find in other systems has turned out to be correct.“ Last weeks g
8、iant was the most unexpected discovery yet. Conventional theory suggests that it must have formed like a star, from a collapsing cloud of interstellar gas. Its smaller companion, only-seven times Jupiters mass, is almost certainly a planet, formed by the buildup of gas and dust left over from a star
9、s formation. Yet the fact that these two orbs are so close together suggests to some theorists that they must have formed together so maybe the bigger one is a planet after all. Or maybe astronomers will have to rethink their definition of “planet.“ Just because we put heavenly objects into categori
10、es doesnt mean the distinctions are necessarily valid. And as Tremaine puts it, “When your classification schemes start breaking down, you know youre learning something exciting. This is wonderful stuff.“ 1 The author believes that_. ( A) the discovery of planets is as important as the launch of spa
11、ce shuttles ( B) astronomers have been making a lot of discoveries of planets ( C) the public have no interest in astronomical discoveries ( D) there is little for astronomers to discover now 2 The two finds are remarkable in that_. ( A) the planets are far from our solar system ( B) the sizes of th
12、e plants are too huge ( C) astronomers have never seen similar orbiting pattern and size before ( D) scientists cannot figure out what they can be 3 By saying that our solar system “may be a cosmic oddball“ (Lines 56, Paragraph 3). the author intends to render the idea that_. ( A) other stars have p
13、lanets more or less like the one going around the sun ( B) the orbits of extrasolar planets around their stars are elongated ones ( C) the way planets orbiting around the sun in our solar system is quite unique ( D) planets in other systems are generally huger than the ones in ours 4 The case of the
14、 giant heavenly body demonstrates that_. ( A) conventional theory cannot explain such astronomical phenomenon satisfactorily ( B) it is either a star or a planet ( C) it was formed like a star and orbits like a planet ( D) theorists give a wrong definition of “planet“ 5 The best title for this passa
15、ge could be_. ( A) New Planetary Puzzlers ( B) Two Remarkable Finds ( C) A Redefinition of “Planet“ ( D) Hot Jupiters Challenging Conventional Theory 5 The Tapping of Automatic Intelligence Car Last year, Americas Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, DARPA, thought it would be a good idea to o
16、rganize a robot race across the Nevada desert. The idea of the Grand Challenge, as DARPA dubbed it, was for autonomous robot vehicles to steer a 227km (142 mile) course and claim a $ 1 million jackpot. This would be a first step towards DARPAs ultimate goal of being able to build unmanned self-drivi
17、ng military vehicles and thus keep American troops out of harms way on the battlefield. This years crop of 23 entrants were offered an even greater incentive a $ 2 million prize for the winner. That, plus the intervening 18 months, seems to have done the trick. This time, five vehicles finished the
18、211 km course. The winner, a modified Volkswagen Touareg dubbed Stanley by its makers, a team from Stanford University, did it in a mere six hours and 54 minutes. Stanley was, of course, specially hardened by its designers for the rough terrain of the Nevada desert. The clever bit, however, was the
19、vehicles brain. This was designed and built by the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (SAIL). Stanleys brain consists of six top-of-the-range Pentium chips wired collaboratively together. It is programmed with special software that is able to learn from its mistakes. This software mastered
20、the tricks of collision-avoidance in a of desert test runs conducted before the race started. Like all brains, Stanleys has a range of sensory inputs to process. A global positioning system (GPS) receiver tells it where on the Earths surface it is. Television cameras, radar and four laser-based dist
21、ance monitors tell it what its surroundings are like. By comparing its GPS location with its pre-programmed destination (announced only a few hours before the race began), it knew which way it wanted to go. And, by studying its surroundings, it could work out what looked like the safest route that w
22、as also in approximately the right direction. Although Stanley carried off the laurels, the other four finishers did respectably. Sandstorm managed a time just ten minutes behind the winner while her sister vehicle Highlander came in ten minutes after that. GrayBot and TerraMax, the other two course
23、-completers, came in at seven hours 30 minutes and 12 hours 51 minutes, respectively. So smart, autonomous vehicles can, indeed, find their way across several hundred kilometres of desert. The question is, what next? DARPAs answer, of course, will be to go down the military route. But this sort of t
24、echnology has obvious civilian applications as well as Sebastian Thrun. the head of both SAIL and the Stanford racing team, is keen to emphasize. Dr. Thrun thinks that it could lead to self-driving road vehicles within 30 years andmore immediately to greatly improved collision-avoidance systems. Whe
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