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
As more people live closer together, and as they use machines to produce leisure, they find that their leisure, and even their w
As more people live closer together, and as they use machines to produce leisure, they find that their leisure, and even their w
admin
2010-07-19
36
问题
As more people live closer together, and as they use machines to produce leisure, they find that their leisure, and even their working hours, become spoilt by a by-product of their machines--namely, noise. Noise is nowadays in the news; it has acquired political status, and public opinion is demanding, more and more insistently, that something be done about it. So it was very appropriate’ that many people professionally interested in noise control should meet to discuss their common problems at a large-scale conference. In the three days of the Conference at Teddington, 25 papers were presented; and faced with the pile of texts, whose contents ranged from sophisticated aerodynamics to general comments on the irritation expressed by neighbours, it was difficult to sort out the new ideas which remain active in one’s mind six months from now, from the big mass of valuable knowledge and facts which will remain on the shelves for reference.
This difficulty was faced by Mr. D. W. Robinson, head of the acoustics work at the National Physical Laboratory. His introduction elaborated the general idea that noise must be considered in relation to the social organism which produces it. Sound becomes annoying noise only when someone’s opinion has made it so. In terms of energy, it is an undesired byproduct, often an exceedingly small fraction of the main output of the machine or process which produces it, and correspondingly difficult to reduce significantly. To control noise is going to demand much self-discipline (annoyance arises often from lack of common courtesy and imagination), a sense of proportion (there is usually a conflict of interest if a noise is to be stopped), the expenditure of money (and it is far more economical to do this early rather than late), and, finally, technical knowledge.
Technical difficulties often arise from the subjective-objective nature of the problem. You can define the excessive speed of a motor Car in terms of a pointer reading on a speedometer. But can you define excessive noise in the same way? The results of several large-scale experiments, involving numbers of vehicles and of listeners, show how difficult it is to fix any instrumental reading as a legal limit in a way which satisfies most of the public and yet is fair to the vehicle owner. You, find, for example, that with any existing simple "noise meter", vehicles which are judged to be equally noisy by a jury may show considerable difference on the meter.
A group of papers dealt with noise, at the source--the basic origins of noise in gears, internal combustion engines, fans and jets. The prospect of a significant reduction in noise output from jet engines of the future was one of the most important questions discussed at the conference. Though the ideal cure for noise is to stop it at its source, this may in many cases be impossible. The next weapon in the anti-noise armory is to absorb it in transit to the ear.
It is a common fallacy that a sound absorbent such as glass wool is opaque to sound and is therefore the best way of diminishing annoying noise from the flat next door. In a normally furnished room, lining a wall with absorbent will have little effect on the noise level built up by reverberation; and will contribute hardly anything to the acoustic opacity of the wall. In a typical factory building, even if all available surfaces are covered with absorbent, the noise level is unlikely to drop by more than five decibels. A consultant will often recommend light partitioning, and partial screening round noisy machines, as a more of the Conference at Teddington, 25 papers were presented; and faced with the pile of texts, whose contents ranged from sophisticated aerodynamics to general comments on the irritation expressed by neighbours, it was difficult to sort out the new ideas which remain active in one’s mind six months from now, from the big mass of valuable knowledge and facts which will remain on the shelves for reference.
This difficulty was faced by Mr. D. W. Robinson, head of the acoustics work at the National Physical Laboratory. His introduction elaborated the general idea that noise must be considered in relation to the social organism which produces it. Sound becomes annoying noise only when someone’s opinion has made it so. In terms of energy, it is an undesired byproduct, often an exceedingly small fraction of the main output of the machine or process which produces it, and correspondingly difficult to reduce significantly. To control noise is going to demand much self-discipline (annoyance arises often from lack of common courtesy and imagination), a sense of proportion (there is usually a conflict of interest if a noise is to be stopped), the expenditure of money (and it is far more economical to do this early rather than late), and, finally, technical knowledge.
Technical difficulties often arise from the subjective-objective nature of the problem. You can define the excessive speed of a motor Car in terms of a pointer reading on a speedometer. But can you define excessive noise in the same way? The results of several large-scale experiments, involving numbers of vehicles and of listeners, show how difficult it is to fix any instrumental reading as a legal limit in a way which satisfies most of the public and yet is fair to the vehicle owner. You, find, for example, that with any existing simple "noise meter", vehicles which are judged to be equally noisy by a jury may show considerable difference on the meter.
A group of papers dealt with noise, at the source--the basic origins of noise in gears, internal combustion engines, fans and jets. The prospect of a significant reduction in noise output from jet engines of the future was one of the most important questions discussed at the conference. Though the ideal cure for noise is to stop it at its source, this may in many cases be impossible. The next weapon in the anti-noise armory is to absorb it in transit to the ear.
It is a common fallacy that a sound absorbent such as glass wool is opaque to sound and is therefore the best way of diminishing annoying noise from the flat next door. In a normally furnished room, lining a wall with absorbent will have little effect on the noise level built up by reverberation; and will contribute hardly anything to the acoustic opacity of the wall. In a typical factory building, even if all available surfaces are covered with absorbent, the noise level is unlikely to drop by more than five decibels. A consultant will often recommend light partitioning, and partial screening round noisy machines, as a more effective and a more economical course.
Domestic noises may perhaps be controlled by forethought and courtesy and industrial noises by good planning and technical improvement. But, if we are going to allow fast motor-cycles and heavy diesel lorries to pass continuously through residential and business property, the community as a whole must decide on the control it needs to exercise, for in the long run, it has got to pay for it. And if a nation is to take a leading part in modern air transport, it must enter into international agreements on the noise control measures it will impose at its airports and here the cost of any real control is immediately to be measured in millions of pounds.
Which of the following is true about noise control?
选项
A、Domestic noises may be controlled by good manners.
B、Industrial noises may be controlled by advancement in technology.
C、Transportation noises may be controlled by the concerted efforts of a community.
D、All of the above.
答案
D
解析
最后一段第一句指出,室内噪音可通过考虑周到和讲礼貌来控制,而工业噪音可通过良好规划和技术进步来控制,因此A和B都正确。C也正确,因为最后一段第二句提到,如果要解决交通噪音,整个社区都应该来做抉择(the community as a whole must decide on the control it needs to exercise)。C中The concerted efforts意思是“共同努力”。所以应选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/rP3YFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Today,scienceandtechnologydevelopveryfast,andbooksonscientificandtechnologicalknowledgearepublishedatarateof
AmericanGroupDynamicsToday,inWesternresearchinstitutesanduniversitydepartment,muchworkisdoneasateamproject
______istheoutstandingrepresentativeofAestheticisminBritishliteraturehistory?
A、allofOPEC’s11members,exceptforSaudiArabia,refusedthesuggestionB、allofOPEC’s11members,exceptforSaudiArabia,
OppositiontotheVietnamWarintheUnitedStatesdevelopedimmediatelyafterthebeginningofthewar,chieflyamongtradition
AmericanIndianMovement(AIM)isanorganizationdevotedtopromotingculturalawarenessandpoliticalselfdeterminationforN
A、ThestoriesofHarryPotterarecriticizedinsomeothercitiesinU.SexceptNewMexiconB、YoungpeoplearefascinatedwithH
A、escalatedintociviccampaignsnationwideB、calledforaboycottofJapanesegoodsC、postponedjointmilitaryexerciseswithT
A、theirstudieshavenotyetstartedB、theirinquirieshavereceivedgovernmentsupportC、theMatrixChurchillcaseandtheDrag
MrDuffyraisedhiseyesfromthepaperandgazedoutofhiswindowonthecheerlesseveninglandscape.Theriverlayquietbesi
随机试题
A、15dollars.B、20dollars.C、25dollars.D、50dollars.C对话中女士问男士她要付多少钱,男士回答这周该商品在促销,它们已经降到了25美元。
女性,10岁,阵发性腹痛,黑便2天,双下肢散在出血点,双膝关节肿胀,腹软,双下腹压痛,白细胞12.5×109/L,血小板200×109/L,血红蛋白11Og/L,尿常规:蛋白质(+),红细胞(+),颗粒管型0~3个/HP该患者的诊断可能是
某患者,女,30岁。平素形体消瘦,性情急躁,现胁痛口苦,纳呆泛恶,目黄溲赤,苔黄而腻,脉弦数。此治法为:
患者,女性,62岁。高血压1年,使用降压药时应注意
立宪价值是左右宪法实施效果的基本因素之一。你认为宪法在制定和实施过程中,应当体现和保护下列选项中的哪些价值?()
下列选项中属于风险响应工作内容的是()。
我国外汇资本项目下的外汇收支已经完全开放。()
有生命物质和无生命物质的根本区别是()。
—Doyouwantthishook?—Yes,Iwant______.
TheOlympicGamesareheld______.WhatdoesthepassagetellusaboutthesignificanceoftheOlympicGames?
最新回复
(
0
)