首页
登录
职称英语
"Weather and Chaotic Systems" Weather and climate are closely related, but th
"Weather and Chaotic Systems" Weather and climate are closely related, but th
游客
2025-02-05
3
管理
问题
"Weather and Chaotic Systems"
Weather and climate are closely related, but they are not quite the same thing. In any particular location, some days may be hotter or cooler, clearer or cloudier, calmer or stormier than others. The ever-varying combination of winds, clouds, temperature, and pressure is what we call weather. Climate is the long-term average of weather, which means it can change only on much longer time scales. The complexity of weather makes it difficult to predict, and at best, the local weather can be predicted only a week or so in advance.
Scientists today have a very good understanding of the physical laws and mathematical equations that govern the behavior and motion of atoms in the air, oceans, and land. Why, then, do we have so much trouble predicting the weather? To understand why the weather is so unpredictable we must look at the nature of scientific prediction.
Suppose you want to predict the location of a car on a road 1 minute from now. You need two basic pieces of information: where the car is now, and how fast it is moving. If the car is now passing Smith Road and heading north at 1 mile per minute, it will be 1 mile north of Smith Road in 1 minute.
Now, suppose you want to predict the weather. Again, you need two basic types of information: (1) the current weather and (2) how weather changes from one moment to the next. You could attempt to predict the weather by creating a "model world." For example, you could overlay a globe of the Earth with graph paper and then specify the current temperature, pressure, cloud cover, and wind within each square. These are your starting points, or initial conditions. Next, you could input all the initial conditions into a computer, along with a set of equations (physical laws) that describe the processes that can change weather from one moment to the next.
Suppose the initial conditions represent the weather around the Earth at this very moment and you run your computer model to predict the weather for the next month in New York City. The model might tell you that tomorrow will be warm and sunny, with cooling during the next week and a major storm passing through a month from now. But suppose you run the model again, making one minor change in the initial conditions—say, a small change in the wind speed somewhere over Brazil. A This slightly different initial condition will not change the weather prediction for tomorrow in New York City. B But for next month’s weather, the two predictions may not agree at all! C
The disagreement between the two predictions arises because the laws governing weather can cause very tiny changes in initial conditions to be greatly magnified over time. D This extreme sensitivity to initial conditions is sometimes called the butterfly effect: If initial conditions change by as much as the flap of a butterfly’s wings, the resulting prediction may be very different.
The butterfly effect is a hallmark of chaotic systems. Simple systems are described by linear equations in which, for example, increasing a cause produces a proportional increase in an effect. In contrast, chaotic systems are described by nonlinear equations, which allow for subtler and more intricate interactions. For example, the economy is nonlinear because a rise in interest rates does not automatically produce a corresponding change in consumer spending. Weather is nonlinear because a change in the wind speed in one location does not automatically produce a corresponding change in another location.
Despite their name, chaotic systems are not necessarily random. In fact, many chaotic systems have a kind of underlying order that explains the general features of their behavior even while details at any particular moment remain unpredictable. In a sense, many chaotic systems—like the weather—are "predictably unpredictable." Our understanding of chaotic systems is increasing at a tremendous rate, but much remains to be learned about them. [br] The word features in the passage is closest in meaning to
选项
A、problems
B、exceptions
C、characteristics
D、benefits
答案
C
解析
In this passage, characteristics is a synonym for "features." Context comes from the contrast with "details" later in the sentence.
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3944193.html
相关试题推荐
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
"WeatherandChaoticSystems"Weatherandclimatearecloselyrelated,butth
TheClimateofJapanP1:MeteorologicalfeaturesinJapanaremainlyshapedbyt
TheClimateofJapanP1:MeteorologicalfeaturesinJapanaremainlyshapedbyt
TheClimateofJapanP1:MeteorologicalfeaturesinJapanaremainlyshapedbyt
TheClimateofJapanP1:MeteorologicalfeaturesinJapanaremainlyshapedbyt
随机试题
[originaltext]M:Sure.Peopleoftenhavedifferentwaysoflearningandapproac
WhenLouiseBrownwasbornon25July1978,shekickedoffanera.Thefirst
[img]2018m9s/ct_etoefz_etoeflistz_201808_0005[/img][br]Accordingtothediscus
Smokingisconsidereddangeroustothehealth.Ourtobacco-seller,Mr.Johns
A.1.53% B.1.56% C.1.62% D.1.73%
鼓沟位于颞骨的()A.鳞部 B.岩部 C.乳突部 D.鼓部
重度宫颈糜烂患者,宫颈刮片为巴氏Ⅲ级,下一步处理应是下列哪项A.3个月后复查宫颈
已知矩阵,若矩阵M属于特征值3的一个特征向量为。求矩阵M的逆矩阵M-1。
人们越不喜欢现在,时间偏好就( )。A.越低 B.越高 C.不确定 D.
某建筑单位投资新建办公楼,建筑面积8000m2,钢筋混凝土框架结构,地上八层。招
最新回复
(
0
)