首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
"Astronomy Class" What can be inferred about the professor?
"Astronomy Class" What can be inferred about the professor?
admin
2012-01-14
12
问题
"Astronomy Class"
What can be inferred about the professor?
Narrator: Listen to part of a discussion in an astronomy class. The professor is talking about the solar
system.
Professor:
Okay, let’s get started. Um, as you know today I promised to take you on a walk through the solar
system, so let’s start here with the central object of our solar system--the Sun. As you can see, the Sun is
about five inches in diameter and that’s about the size of a large grapefruit, which is exactly what I’ve
used to represent it here in our model. So, I’m going to take two steps and that will bring me to the planet
closest to the Sun. That would be Mercury. Two more steps to Venus. And one step from Venus to
Earth. Let’s continue walking three steps from Earth to Mars. And that’s as far as I can go here in the
classroom, but we can visualize the rest of the journey. Don’t bother writing this down. Just stay with me Q24
on this. So, to go from Mars to Jupiter, we’d have to walk a little over half the length of a football field, so
that would put us about at the library here on campus, and then to get from Jupiter to Saturn, we’d have
to walk another 75 yards, so by then we’d be at Harmon Hall. From Saturn to Uranus, we’d have to walk
again as far as we’d gone in our journey from the Sun to Saturn, and so we’d probably be at the Student
Union. From Uranus to Neptune we’d have to walk the same distance again, which would take us all the
way to the graduate dormitory towers. From Neptune to Pluto, another 125 yards. So, we’d end up
about one third of a mile from this classroom at the entrance to the campus.
Okay. That’s interesting, but now I want you to think about the orbits of the planets in those
locations. Clearly, the first four planets could orbit fairly comfortably in this room, but to include the others,
we’d have to occupy an area of more than six-tenths of a mile, which is all the way from College Avenue
to Campus Drive. Remember that for this scale, the Sun is five inches, and most of the planets are
smaller than the lead on a sharpened pencil. Okay, with that in mind, I want you to think about space.
Sure, there are some moons around a few planets, and a scattering of asteroids and comets, but really,
there isn’t a lot out there in such a vast area. It’s, well, it’s pretty empty. And that’s what I really want to
demonstrate with this exercise.
Now, it would really be even more impressive if you could actually make that walk, and actually you
can, if you visit Washington, D.C., where a scale model is set up on the National Mall, starting at the
National Air and Space Museum and ending up at the Arts and Industries MuSeum. I did that a couple
of years ago, and it was, well amazing. Even though I knew the distances intellectually, there’s nothing
like the experience. Has anybody else done that walk?
Student 1:
I have. And you’re right. It’s an eye-opener. It took me about twenty minutes to go from the Sun to Pluto
because I stopped to read the information at each planet, but when I made the return trip, it was about
ten minutes.
Professor: Did you take pictures?
Student 1: I didn’t. But, you know, I don’t think it would have captured it anyway.
Professor:
I think you’re right. What impressed rne about doing it was to see what was not there, t mean, how much Q25
space was between the bodies inthe solar system, And a photograph wouldn’t have shown that.
So back to our model. Here’s another thought for you. The scale for our model is 1 to 10 billion.
Now, let’s suppose that we want to go to the nearest star system, the neighbor to our solar system. That
would be the Alpha Centauri system, which is a little less than four and a half light years away. Okay.
Let’s walk it on our model. Here we are on the East Coast of the United States. So if we want to make it
all the way to Alpha Centauri, we have to hike all the way to the West Coast, roughly a distance of 2,700 miles. And that’s just the closest one. To make a model of the Milky Way Galaxy would require a com-
pletely different scale because.., because the surface of the Earth wouldn’t be large enough to
accommodate a model at the scale of 1 to 10 billion.
Now, let’s stop here for a minute because I just want to be sure that we’re all together on the terms
solar system and galaxy. Remember that our sotar system is a single star; the Sun with various bodies
orbiting around it—nine planets and their moons, and asteroids comets meteors But the galaxy has a Q26
lot of star systems—probably 100 billion of them. Okay? This is important because you can be off by
almost 100 billion if you get confused by these terms. Not a good idea.
Okay, then, even if we could figure out a different scale that would let us make a model of the Milky
Way Galaxy, even then, it would be challenging to make 100 billion stars, which is what you’d have to
do to complete the model. How many would that be exactly? Well, just try to count all the grains of sand
on all the beaches on Earth. That would be about 100 billion. But of course, you couldn’t even count
them in your lifetime, could you? If you’d started counting in 1000 B.C.E. you’d be finishing just about
now, with the counting, I mean. But of course, that assumes that you wouldn’t sleep or take any breaks.
So, what am I hoping for from ths ecture? What deyou think I want you to remember? Q27
Student 2: Well, for one thing, the enormous distances... Q23
Student 3: ...and the vast emptiness in space.
Professor:
That’s good. I hope that you’ll also begin to appreciate the fact that the Earth isn’t the center of the
universe. Our planet, although it’s very beautiful and unique, it’s still just one planet, orbiting around just
one star in just one galaxy.
选项
A、The professor used to teach in Washington,D.C.
B、The professor likes his students to participate in the discussion.
C、The professor wants the students to take notes on every detail.
D、The professor is not very interested in the subject of the lecture.
答案
B
解析
The professor likes his students to participate in the discussion.
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/kGyO777K
0
托福(TOEFL)
相关试题推荐
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions18-22)andthelistofpeopleintheboxbelow.Matcheachstatementwiththecorrect
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage3?Inboxes36-40onyouranswersheet,writeTR
ChooseTWOletters,A-F.Writethecorrectlettersinboxes25and26onyouranswersheet.WhichTWOofthefollowingstatement
CompanyInnovationA.InashabbyofficeindowntownManhattan,agroupof30AI(artificialintelligence)programmersfrom
AccordingtoMrSingh,onwhichthingdomanypeoplemakesuperficialobservations?AccordingtoMrSingh,thebiggestproblem
Theprofessorsaysthatsuperhighways______.【29】
Theprofessorsaysthatsuperhighways______.Thestudentthinkspeople______.
Completethechartbelow.Matchtheadvantagesofjoiningalearningcircle(I-VI)totheperson.NOTE:therearemorea
Completethechartbelow.Matchtheadvantagesofjoiningalearningcircle(I-VI)totheperson.NOTE:therearemorea
Completethechartbelow.Matchtheadvantagesofjoiningalearningcircle(I-VI)totheperson.NOTE:therearemorea
随机试题
在活动区的创设过程中,教师要细心观察,充分准备,以满足幼儿临时的需要或活动本身的临时需要。这体现了活动区材料投放的()
点燃的喷灯加油时必须将火焰熄灭后,(无须等待稍冷)才能加油
A.Mygoalistofindoutwhatworksbestwhenitcomestoadulteducation.B.Inmylongseekingforlodging,Ioftenmetwith
有关输尿管损伤的治疗,下列哪项说法是恰当的
A.有利、公正B.权利、义务C.廉洁奉公D.医乃仁术E.等价交换属于医学伦理学基本原则的是
法的指引作用可以分为确定的指引和有选择的指引,下列哪些表述属于有选择的指引?()
关于SMA路面施工温度控制的说法,正确的有()。[2012年6月真题]
某建设项目,建设期为3年,向银行贷款3000万元,第一年贷款500万元,第二年贷款1000万元,第三年贷款1500万元,年利率为10%,则建设期贷款利息为()。
一、注意事项1.本次考试包括给定资料和作答要求两部分。总时间为150分钟,建议阅读资料为40分钟,作答时间为110分钟,总分100分。2.请在答题卡上指定的位置填写自己的姓名、报考部门,填涂准考证号。考生应在答题卡指定的位置作答,未在指定位置作答的,不
设随机变量X与Y独立同分布,且X的概率分布为记U:max{X,Y},V=min{X,Y}.求(U,V)的概率分布;
最新回复
(
0
)