首页
登录
职称英语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading
游客
2024-01-07
60
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
A very brief history of time
These days, time is everything. We worry about being late, we rush to get things done or to be somewhere and our daily schedules are often planned down to the minute. Of course, none of this would have been possible without the humble clock. The internationally accepted division of time into regular, predictable units has become an essential aspect of almost all modern societies yet the history of time keeping is almost as old as civilisation itself. Nearly 3000 years ago, societies were using the stars in order to keep track of time to indicate agricultural cycles. Then came the sundial, an Egyptian invention in which the shadow cast by the sun was used to measure the time not of the seasons but of the day.
The first manufactured clock, believed to have come from Persia, was a system which recreated the movements of the stars. All the celestial bodies which had been used to tell the time of year were plotted onto an intricate system in which the planets rotated around each other. Not being dependent on either sunlight or a clear night, this was one of the earliest systems to divide a complete day. Although ingenious for its time, this method suffered from incorrect astrological assumptions of the period, in which it was believed that the Earth was the centre of the universe.
The Greeks were next to develop a more accurate clock using water to power a mechanism that counted out the divisions of the day. The simplest water clock consisted of a large urn that had a small hole located near the base, and a graduated stick attached to a floating base. The hole would be plugged while the urn was being filled with water, and then the stick would be inserted into the urn. The stick would float perpendicular to the surface of the water, and when the hole at the base of the urn was unplugged, the passage of time was measured as the stick descended farther into the urn.
Then, for nearly one thousand years, there was little in the way of progress in time keeping until the European invention of spring-powered clocks in the late fourteenth century. Unreliable and inaccurate, the early models of these clocks were useful in that they gave direction to new advances. In 1656 Christiaan Huygens, a Dutch scientist, made the first pendulum clock, which had an error of less than one minute a day, the first time such accuracy had been achieved. His later refinements reduced his clock’s error to less than 10 seconds a day. Some years later, Huygens abandoned the pendulum for a balance wheel and spring assembly which allowed for a whole new generation of time piece —the wristwatch. Still found in some of today’s wristwatches, this improvement allowed portable seventeenth-century watches to keep time to 10 minutes a day.
While clock making and musical chime clocks became increasingly popular, it was the invention of the cuckoo clock, designed and made by Franz Anton Ketterer, which really caught people’s imagination. The design was not particularly complex. The clock was mounted on a headboard, normally a very elaborate carving reflecting the tastes of the artist. Many of the original cuckoo clocks are still kept today because of the artwork on the headboard. Using the traditional circular pendulum design, the clock could run accurately for up to a week, using a weight to keep the pendulum in motion. Again, the weight was often carved with a design making it as much an art form as a timepiece. The most innovative feature of these cuckoo clocks, as the name implies, is that a small carved cuckoo came out of the clock to chime the hour. Particularly ingenious was the placement of bellows inside the clock, which were designed to recreate the sound made by the bird, although later models included a lever on the bottom of the clock which could be used to stop this hourly chime.
Refinements to this original pendulum concept meant that by 1721 the pendulum clock remained accurate to within one second per day by compensating for changes in the pendulum’s length due to temperature variations. Over the next century, further refinements reduced this to a hundredth of a second a day. In the 1920s, a new era of clock making began which is still popular today — the quartz clock. When under pressure, quartz generates an electric field of relatively constant frequency, and it was discovered that this electric signal was sufficient to power a clock. Quartz crystal clocks were better because they had fewer moving parts to disturb their regular frequency. Even so, they still rely on a mechanical vibration and this depends on the size of the crystal, and as no two crystals can be exactly alike, there is a degree of difference in every quartz watch.
Comparing performance to price, it is understandable that quartz clocks still dominate the market. Yet they are no longer the most accurate. Scientists had long realised that each chemical element in the universe absorbs and emits electromagnetic radiation at its own specific frequencies. These resonances are inherently stable, thus forming the basis for a reliable system of time measurement, all the more so because no moving parts are needed to record these resonances. Yet the cost of these atomic clocks mean that such timekeeping precision is a long way from becoming common.
Questions 1-6
Look at the following types of clock (Questions 1-6) and the list of descriptions below.
Match each type of clock with the correct description, A-H.
Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.
List of Descriptions
A relied on basic scientific principles
B was the first to replace the pendulum
C is the most common method of timekeeping
D is the most accurate clock
E is the earliest known method of measuring time during the day
F was inaccurate because of misconceptions of the age
G was often highly ornamental
H had only a 10-second margin of error per day [br] Atomic clock
选项
答案
D
解析
有关原子钟的信息集中在第七段,由时态可知应在C、D、E中选择。第七段第二句提到,石英钟不再是最精确的钟表。然后介绍了原子钟,并在最后一句用了precision“精密仪器”来指代原子钟。D项的the most accurate的表述符合文意,D为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3342570.html
相关试题推荐
Directions:Eachofthefollowingreadingcomprehensionquestionsisbasedonth
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationisaviableoption,butshould
Her______shouldnotbeconfusedwithmiserliness;aslongasIhaveknownher,s
Inarecentstudy,DavidCressyexaminestwocentralquestionsconcerningEnglis
Inarecentstudy,DavidCressyexaminestwocentralquestionsconcerningEnglis
Intheearlytwentiethcentury,theideathatpianistsshouldbemusician-schola
Intheearlytwentiethcentury,theideathatpianistsshouldbemusician-schola
WriterJohnWorthensuggestedthat,insomecases,biographersshouldbe(i)____
Thatcritic’swritingissoobscureanddensethatuponfirstreading,onefinds
Believingthatscientistsshould(i)______thepublicaboutimportantscientific
随机试题
Nowwecouldnotdoanythingbut(wait)______forherhere.wait除了在这等她,我们现在什么也做不
A. B. C. D.
下边沿至楼板或底面低于()的窗台等竖向洞口,如侧边落差大于2m时,应加设
A.玫瑰花 B.延胡索 C.大黄 D.麦芽 E.柏子仁易变色的药物是
下列哪种是睾酮的活化形式A.二氢睾酮B.5α-二氢睾酮C.5α-睾酮D.雄酮E.
惠顾回报中,回报价值的大小是以()为基础。 A.购买量 B.商品质量
测评标准体系的类型包括( )和常模参照性指标体系。A.效标参照性标准体系 B
适用于枇杷叶的水处理软化方法是A.淘洗法 B.漂法 C.淋法 D.反复闷润
关于砌筑沟道,下列说法错误的是( )。A.砌筑砂浆应饱满,砌缝应均匀不得有通缝
26岁初产妇。妊娠38周.规律宫缩7小时,枕右前位。估计胎儿体重2800g,胎心
最新回复
(
0
)