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
History of weather forecasting Early methods Almanacs connected the weather with the positions of different【L3
History of weather forecasting Early methods Almanacs connected the weather with the positions of different【L3
admin
2022-03-30
30
问题
History of weather forecasting
Early methods
Almanacs connected the weather with the positions of different【L31】________at particular times.
Invention of weather instruments
A hydrometer showed levels of【L32】________ (Nicholas Cusa 1450)
Temperature variations — first measured by a thermometer containing【L33】________(Galileo Galilei 1593)
A barometer indicated air pressure (Evangelista Torricelli 1645)
Transmitting weather information
The use of the【L34】________allowed information to be passed around the world.
Daily【L35】________ were produced by France.
Producing a weather forecast
Weather observation stations are found mostly at【L36】________around the country.
Satellite images use the colour orange to show【L37】________
The satellites give so much detail that meteorologists can distinguish a particular 【L38】________.
Information about the upper atmosphere is sent from instruments attached to a【L39】________
Radar is particularly useful for following the movement of【L40】________
【L40】
I work for the National Weather Service and as part of your course on weather patterns, I’ve been asked to talk to you about how we predict the weather. We’re so used to switching on our TVs and getting an up-to-date weather forecast at any time of day or night that we probably forget that this level of sophistication has only been achieved in the last few decades and weather forecasting is actually an ancient art. So I want to start by looking back into history.
The earliest weather forecasts appeared in the 1500s in almanacks, which were lists of information produced every year.
Their predictions relied heavily on making connections between the weather and where the planets were in the sky
on certain days. In addition, predictions were often based on information like if the fourth night after a new moon was clear, good weather was expected to follow.
But once basic weather instruments were invented, things slowly started to change. In the mid-fifteenth century a man called Nicholas Cusa, a German mathematician,
designed a hygrometer which told people how much humidity there was in the air.
To do this, Cusa put some sheep’s wool on a set of scales and then monitored the change in the wool’s weight according to the air conditions.
A piece of equipment we all know and use is the thermometer. Changes in temperature couldn’t really be measured until the Italian Galileo Galilei invented his thermometer in 1593. It wasn’t like a modern-day thermometer because
it had water inside it
instead of mercury. In fact, it wasn’t until 1714 that Gabriel Fahrenheit invented the first mercury thermometer. In 1643 another Italian called Evangelists Torricelli invented the first barometer which measured atmospheric pressure. This was another big step forward in more accurate weather predicting.
As time went on, during the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, all these meteorological instruments were improved and developed and people in different countries began to record measurements relating to their local weather. However, in those days it was very difficult to send records from one part of the world to another so
it wasn’t possible for them to share their information until the electric telegraph became more widespread.
This meant that weather observations could be sent on a regular basis to and from different countries. By the 1860s, therefore, weather forecasts were becoming more common and accurate because they were based on observations taken at the same time over a wide area.
In 1863, France started building weather maps each day.
This hadn’t been done before, and other nations soon followed. So that was the start of national weather forecasting and I’ll now tell you how we at the National Weather Centre get the information we need to produce a forecast.
Even today, one of the most important methods we use is observations which tell us what the weather is doing right now. Observation reports are sent automatically from equipment at a number of weather stations in different parts of the country.
They are nearly all based at airports
although a few are in urban centres. The equipment senses temperature, humidity, pressure and wind speed and direction. Meteorologists also rely really heavily on satellites which send images to our computer screens. What we see on our screens is bright colours.
Orange represents dry air
and bright blue shows moisture levels in the atmosphere. The satellites are located 22,000 miles above the surface of the Earth and it’s amazing that despite that distance
it’s possible for us to make out an individual cloud
and follow it as it moves across the landscape.
In addition to collecting data from the ground, we need to know what’s happening in the upper levels of the atmosphere. So a couple of times a day from many sites across the country, we send radiosondes into the air.
A radiosonde is a box containing a package of equipment and it hangs from a balloon
which is filled with gas. Data is transmitted back to the weather station.
Finally, radar. This was first used over 150 years ago and still is. New advances are being made all the time and it is
one method for detecting and monitoring the progress of hurricanes.
Crucial information is shown in different colours representing speed and direction. Radar is also used by aircraft, of course.
All this information from different sources is put into computer models which are like massive computer programs. Sometimes they all give us the same story and sometimes we have to use our own experience to decide which is showing the most accurate forecast which we then pass on to you. So I hope next time you watch the weather forecast, you’ll think about how we meteorologists spend our time. And maybe I’ve persuaded some of you to study meteorology in more depth.
选项
答案
hurricanes
解析
本题询问雷达在追踪什么的运动时特别有用。录音原文中的monitoring the progress of是题目中following the movement of的同义表述,故空格处填入hurricanes“飓风”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/CQAYFFFM
本试题收录于:
雅思听力题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思听力
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
ThewritermentionsanumberoffactorswhichleadhimtodoubtthevalueoftheWZCSdocument.WhichTHREEofthefollowingfac
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions13—26whicharebasedonReadingPassage2below.Moleshapp
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions28-39whicharebasedonReadingPassage3below.Popul
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationinReadingPassage2?Inboxes23-27onyouranswersheetwriteYESif
Completethesummarybelow.Chooseyouranswersfromtheboxbelowthesummaryandwritetheminboxes10—13onyouranswersh
WESTTHAMESCOLLEGEBACKGROUNDINFORMATIONFORCANDIDATESWestThamesCollege(initiallyknownasHounslowBoroughC
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions1-13whicharebasedonReadingPassage1below.LEARNINGBYEXAMPLESALearning
REVIEWOFRESEARCHONTHEEFFECTSOFFOODPROMOTIONTOCHILDRENThisreviewwascommissionedbytheFoodStandardsAgencytoex
ElephantCommunicationO’Connell-Rodwell,apostdoctoralfellowatStanfordUniversity,hastravelledtoNamibia’sfirst-ev
随机试题
人体内温度最高的脏器是【】
下列是构效关系缩写的是
外伤性牙折伴牙周膜挤压伤或撕裂伤者,可能有尖周反应,根充后应至少观察的时间为
同一被照体的不同部位产生不等量的放大,称为
以上哪项不是帕金森病强直的特点
白色血栓形成的主要成分是
A.肝脾不调B.肝火犯肺C.肝肾阴虚D.肺肾阴虚E.肺脾两虚胸胁胀痛,善太息,腹部胀满,肠鸣,大便稀薄,矢气多,精神抑郁,证属()。
关于我国刑事诉讼构造,下列哪一选项是正确的?
如何去________隐藏在已千变万化了的各种学说背后尚未完全遗失的经典原貌,获得真实的体温和人格图谱,从而剥离后世僵化、变异、乏味、随心所欲的解读,尤其是那些自以为智慧的肢解和________,当是目前国学热当中应解决的重要问题。填入画横线部分最恰当的
有如下程序:PrivateSubCommand1_Click() DimiAsInteger,jAsInteger DimsumAsInteger n=1 Do j=1 Do sum=su
最新回复
(
0
)