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提问人:网友shineleeli 发布时间:2022-01-07
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The nuclear age in which the human race is living, and may soon be dying, began for the ge

neral public with the dropping of an atom bomb on Hiroshima on 6 August 1945. But for nuclear scientists and for certain American authorities, it had been known for some time that such a weapon was possible. Work towards making it had been begun by the United States, Canada and Britain very soon after the beginning of the Second World War. The existence of possibly explosive forces in the nuclei of atoms had been known ever since the structure of atoms was discovered by Rutherford.

An atom consists of a tiny core called the "nucleus" with attendant electrons circling round it. The hydrogen atom, which is the simplest and lightest, has only one electron. Heavier atoms have more and more as they go up the scale. The first discovery that had to do with what goes on in nuclei was radioactivity, which is caused by particles being shot out of the nucleus. It was known that a great deal of energy is locked up in the nucleus, but, until just before the outbreak of the Second World War, there was no way of releasing this energy in any large quantity. A revolutionary discovery was that, in certain circumstances, mass can be transformed into energy in accordance with Einstein's formula which states that the energy generated is equal to the mass lost multiplied by the square of the velocity of light.

The A-bomb, however, used a different process, depending upon radioactivity. In this process, called "fission", a heavier atom splits into two lighter atoms. In general, in radioactive substances this fission proceeds at a constant rate which is slow where substances occurring in nature are concerned. But there is one form. of uranium called "U235" which, when it is pure, sets up a chain reaction which spreads like fire, though with enormously greater rapidity. It is this substance which was used in making the atom bomb.

The political background of the atomic scientists' work was the determination to defeat the Nazis. It was held--I think rightly--that a Nazi victory would be an appalling disaster. It was also held, in Western countries, that German scientists must be well advanced towards making an A-bomb, and that if they succeeded before the West did they would probably win the war. When the war was over, it was discovered, to the complete astonishment of both American and British scientists, that the Germans were nowhere near success, and as everybody knows, the Germans were defeated before any nuclear weapons had been made. But I do not think that nuclear scientists of the West can be blamed for thinking the work urgent and necessary. Even Einstein favored it.

When, however, the German war was finished, the great majority of those scientists who had collaborated towards making the A-bomb considered that it should not be used against the Japanese, who were already on the verge of defeat and, in any case, did not constitute such a menace to the world as Hitler. Many of them made urgent representations to the American Government advocating that, instead of using the bomb as a weapon of war, they should after a public announcement, explode it in a desert, and that future control of nuclear energy should be placed in the hands of an international authority. Seven of the most eminent of nuclear scientists drew up what is known as "The Franck Report" which they presented to the Secretary of War in June 1945. This is a very admirable and far-seeing document, and if it had won the assent of the politicians, none of our subsequent terrors would have arisen.

We may infer that the writer's attitude towards the A-bomb is that ______.

A.it is a necessary evil

B.it is a terrible threat to the whole of mankind

C.it played a vital part in defeating the Japanese

D.it was a wonderful invention

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更多“The nuclear age in which the human race is living, and may soon be dying, began for the ge”相关的问题
第1题
The explosion of the first atomic device opened the nuclear age,______(这永远地改变了世界)

The explosion of the first atomic device opened the nuclear age,______(这永远地改变了世界).

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第2题
The steam engine opened the mechanical age, and it reached its peak with the discovery of
nuclear fission and nuclear fusion, which______the energy producing processes of a star.

A.repeated

B.substituted

C.imitated

D.explained

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第3题
According to the text, why do we need to prepare for a new age of energy synthesis?

A、Because the time when there is sufficient supply of cheap energy will soon be over.

B、Because fossil fuels are unhealthy and environmentally unfriendly.

C、Because nuclear power may be disastrous.

D、Because it is always true that the more the better.

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第4题
After the first atomic bomb explosion, everybody agreed that ________.A) it was wis

After the first atomic bomb explosion, everybody agreed that ________.

A) it was wise to choose Alamogordo as the test site

B) man had entered the age of nuclear warfare

C) it was not wise to use such a powerful weapon

D) it was not possible to keep the technology of making atomic bombs secret

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第5题
The Nuclear AgeThe Earth exploded into the nuclear age on 16 July 1945. On that day, the U

The Nuclear Age

The Earth exploded into the nuclear age on 16 July 1945. On that day, the US tested a completely new type of weapon in the New Mexico desert. Crafted from a tennis-ball-sized plutonium sphere (钚球), the bomb produced an explosion equivalent to 20,000 tons of TNT.

Sixty years on, tens of thousands of tonnes of plutonium and enriched uranium (浓缩铀) have been produced. The global nuclear arsenal (兵工厂) stands at about 27,000 bombs. Nine countries very proba-bly possess nuclear weapons,while 40 others have access to the materials and technology to make them.

But nuclear technology has also been used for peaceful means. The first nuclear reactor to provide electricity to a national grid opened in England in 1956. Now, 442 reactors in 32 nations produce 16% of the world's electricity.

Nuclear power has been championed as a source of cheap energy. But this was weakened at the end of the 20th century by reactor accidents, the problems of radioactive waste disposal, competition from more-efficient electricity sources and unavoidable links to nuclear weapons proliferation (核武器扩散). Nonetheless, growing evidence for global warming had led some to argue that nuclear power is the only way to generate power without emitting greenhouse gases.

Dropping the bomb

The Hiroshima (广岛) bomb was made of enriched uranium, compressed by detonating explosives to achieve a supercritical mass (超临界质量). The Nagasaki(长崎) bomb was made of plutonium.

Following 1945, the US developed massively destructive hydrogen bombs. Some are equivalent to many millions of tons of TNT, and yield vast amounts of energy through nuclear fusion. Nuclear weapons technology has been adapted for many military uses, such as intercontinental missiles, huge fission (裂变) weapons, mini-nukes (微型核弹), gamma ray weapons, nuclear landmines (地雷), and nuclear defence missiles.

By bombing Japan, the US started a worldwide arms race, and the Cold War with the Soviet Union. The Soviets developed and tested their own bomb in 1949. The United Kingdom achieved the feat in 1952, followed by France in 1960, China in 1964 and most recently India and Pakistan in 1998.

Israel is widely thought to possess nuclear weapons and North Korea declared in 2005 that it did too, though neither has conducted tests. Iraq and Libya (利比亚) have attempted to develop them in the past, and Iran has been accused of having a secret nuclear weapons programme.

Stopping the Spread

While up to nine nations have nuclear weapons, 187 others have promised not to manufacture them. Twenty countries such as Switzerland, Brazil, Argentina, Canada and South Africa once had programmes; but as signatories to the 1968 Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), later abandoned them.

The NPT aimed to limit the spread of atomic weapons and bound the five original nuclear weapons states to sharing nuclear technology and materials for peaceful means mainly through US and Russian disarmament, the treaty has achieved the decommissioning (退役) of 38,000 warheads (弹头) since 1986.

However, the treaty is under strain in 2005. Nuclear-armed states stand accused of failing to reduce their arsenals (兵工厂), and of considering new weapons, like mini-nukes. Iran reached an agreement with Europe to halt uranium enrichment activities, but may renege (食言)on that deal.

The 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty is an attempt to limit test detonations and slow nuclear armament, but the US senate refused to approve of it in 1999.

Controlling the remains of the Soviet Union's vast and poorly protected nuclear arsenal is another great challenge.

The International Atomic Energy Agency is struggling to keep track of smuggling and the black market in nuclear materials and technology, and fears of te

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第6题
Risks associated with nuclear power ______.A.can only occur at the plant SiteB.may occur w

Risks associated with nuclear power ______.

A.can only occur at the plant Site

B.may occur when wastes are transported or recycled

C.are limited to structural problems within the plant

D.are primarily a result of carelessness

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第7题
The function of the last sentence is to ______.A.advance the final argumentB.reflect the w

The function of the last sentence is to ______.

A.advance the final argument

B.reflect the writer's attitude

C.reverse previously expressed thoughts

D.show the disadvantages of nuclear power

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第8题
听力原文: A senior Pentagon official is disputing published suggestions that the Bush Admi
nistration may be poised to resume underground nuclear testing beneath the Nevada desert. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz says the administration has no plans to order a resumption of nuclear testing: "I'm not aware of a need to resume testing at this time."

But Mr. Wolfowitz said in an interview with radio reporters that he cannot rule out the possibility that testing--suspended nine years ago may one day again be necessary.

There may be circumstances, where--particularly if we develop questions about the reliability or safety of, our nuclear weapons- where you would have to contemplate doing that [testing]. And, bear in mind, these are things that age with time, and more so because the elements of which they are composed axe radioactive and are actively decomposing all the time. So, you have to keep a very close eye on the condition of that force. But, I am not aware of any imminent need to contemplate testing.

What does Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz mean?

A.The testing will be resumed if necessary.

B.The testing must be resumed soon.

C.The testing will never be resumed.

D.He cannot rule out the possibility of that testing.

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第9题
听力原文:W: I heard that your family arrived yesterday, didn't they?M: Yes, they did. W: T

听力原文:W: I heard that your family arrived yesterday, didn't they?

M: Yes, they did.

W: That's good! Dr. Morrison, your family is now in China with you. You won't miss them, then. To talk about the family, I want to ask you some questions about American families. Er. . . Do you most Americans live in "small families" or "big families"?

M: In the United States, most people normally choose to live in "small families", but we call them "nuclear families".

W: What is the average size of a nuclear family?

M: Well, it depends on the number of children, because the nuclear family consists of a husband, a wife and children. However, if there are no children, then the husband and wife are the nuclear family. Of course, there may be only one parent due to a death, separation or divorce. In this ease, the nuclear family is the single parent and children.

W: Are there any big families in the United States?

M: Oh, you mean the extended family. No, not many. Most Americans, both the elderly and the young couples prefer to live in their own homes.

W: Since most Americans live in nuclear families rather than in extended families, the majority of the elderly do not see their children and their relatives, do they?

M: Wall, people often make such assumptions, but that is not the case according to recent sociological research.

W: Oh, what's that?

M: The recent research shows that more elderly people in the United States live within ten minutes of their children by car than in Denmark, and over 78 percent of the elderly have seen their children within a week.

W: Now I've got a general idea about American family structure. Thank you.

M: You're welcome.

Most Americans prefer to live in

A.big families

B.small families

C.nuclear families

D.middle size families

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第10题
As new technology becomes available to____________(允许更加高效地利用核能), less nuclear w

As new technology becomes available to____________(允许更加高效地利用核能), less nuclear waste will be produced.

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第11题
Part BDirections: You will hear four dialogues or monologues. Before listening to each one

Part B

Directions: You will hear four dialogues or monologues. Before listening to each one, you will have 5 seconds to read each of the questions which accompany it. While listening, answer each question by choosing A, B, C or D. After listening, you will have 10 seconds to check your answer to each question. You will hear each piece ONLY ONCE.

听力原文:W: I heard that your family arrived yesterday, didn't they?

M: Yes, they did.

W: That's good! Dr. Morrison, your family is now in China with you. You won't miss them, then. To talk about the family, I want to ask you some questions about American families. Er... Do most Americans live in "small families" or "big families?"

M: In the United States, most people normally choose to live in "small families," but we call them "nuclear families."

W: What is the average size of a nuclear family?

M: Well, it depends on the number of children, because the nuclear family consists of a husband, a wife and children. However, if there are no children, then the husband and wife are the nuclear family. Of course, there maybe only one parent due to a death, separate or divorce. In this case, the nuclear family is the single parent and children.

W: Are there any big families in the United States?

M: Oh, you mean the extended family. No, not many. Most Americans, both the elderly and the young couples prefer to live in their own homes.

W: Since most Americans live in nuclear families rather than in extended families, the majority of the elderly do not see their children and their relatives, do they?

M: Well, people often make such assumptions, but that is not the case according to recent sociological research.

W: Oh, what's that?

M: The recent research shows that more elderly people in the United States live within ten minutes of their children by car than in Denmark, and over 78 percent of the elderly had seen their children within a week.

W: Now I've got a general idea about American family structure. Thank you.

M: You're welcome.

Nuclear family may consist of ______.

A.parents and their children

B.wife and husband

C.a parent and children

D.all of the above

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