2014年职称英语理工类A 完形填空11-15篇 字典版重点标注 联系客服

发布时间 : 星期二 文章2014年职称英语理工类A 完形填空11-15篇 字典版重点标注更新完毕开始阅读15500c8c0342a8956bec0975f46527d3240ca6a2

responses, Romero Lankao writes, ” They don’t

(理工类)14年完形填空impose construction standards that could reduce

heating and air conditioning needs. They don't

第十一篇Climate Change Poses Major Risks for emphasize mass transit and reduce automobile Unprepared Cities (气候变化给不备城市带来use. In fact, many local governments are

taking a hands—off approach.” Thus, she 重大风险)

A new examination of urban policies has been urges them to change their idle policies carried out recently by Patricia Romero and to take strong steps to prevent the harmful Lankao.She is a sociologist specializing in effects of climate change on cities.. climate change and urban development.She

warns that many of the world’s fast-growing 第十二篇Free Statins With Fast Food Could urban areas,especially in developing Neutralize Heart Risk (快餐加免费降胆固醇countries.will likely suffer from the impacts of 药物可以降低罹患心脏病的风险)

changing climate.Her work also concludes that Fast food outlets could provide statin drugs free most cities are failing to reduce emissions of of charge so that customers can reduce the heart carbon dioxide and other greenhouse disease dangers of fatty food, researchers at gases.These gases are known to affect the Imperial College London suggest in a new atmosphere.”Climate change is a deeply local study.

issue and poses profound threats to the growing Statins reduce the amount of unhealthy ”LDL” cities of the world,” says Romero Lankao. ”But cholesterol in the blood. A wealth of trial data has too few cities are developing effective strategies proven them to be highly effective at lowering a

person’s heart attack risk . to protect their residents.\

Cities are major sources of In a paper published in the American Journal of greenhouse gases.And urban populations are Cardiology,Dr Darrel Francis and colleagues likely to be among those most severely affected calculate that the reduction in heart attack risk by future climate change. Lankao’s findings offered by a statin is enough to offset the increase highlight ways in which city-residents are in heart attack risk from eating a cheeseburger particularly vulnerable, and suggest policy and drinking a milkshake.

interventions that could offer immediate and Dr Francis,from the National Heart and Lung

Institute at Imperial College London,who is the longer-term benefits.

The locations and dense construction senior author of the study, said:”Statins don’t cut patterns of cities often place their populations at out a11 of the unhealthy effects of cheeseburgers greater risk for natural disasters. Potential and French fries.It’s better to avoid fatty food

But we’ve worked out that in terms of threats associated with climate include storm altogether.

surges and prolonged hot weather. Storm surges your possibility of having a heart attack. Taking can flood coastal areas and prolonged hot a statin can reduce your risk to more or less the

weather can heat heavily paved cities more than same degree as a fast food meal increases it.” surrounding areas.The impacts of such natural “It’s ironic that people are free to take as many events can be more serious in an urban unhealthv condiments in fast food outlets as they environment.For example,a prolonged heat like, but statins, which are beneficial to heart wave can increase existing levels of air health, have to be prescribed. It makes sense to pollution,causing widespread health make risk-reducing statins available just as easily problems.Poorer neighborhoods that may lack as the unhealthy condiments that are provided

It would cost less than 5 pence per basic facilities such as drinking water or a free of charge.

dependable network of roads,are especially customer 一not much different to a sachet of vulnerable to natural disasters.Many residents in sugar.” Dr Francis said.

poorer countries live in substandard housing When people engage in risky behaviours like without access to reliable drinking water,driving or smoking, they’re encouraged to take

measures that lower their risk, 1ike wearing a roads and basic services.

or choosing cigarettes with filters. Local governments, seatbelt

therefore ,should take measures to protect their Taking a statin is a rational way of lowering residents.”Unfortunately,they tend to move some of the risks of eating a fatty meal. towards rhetoric rather than meaningful

第十三篇Better Solar Energy Systems: More Heat, More Light (更有效的太阳能系统:更多热量,更强灯光)

Solar photovoltaic thermal energy systems, or PVTs, generate both heat and electricity, but until now they haven’t been very good at the heat-generating part compared to a stand-alone solar thermal collector. That’s because they operate at low temperatures to cool crystalline silicon solar cells, which lets the silicon generate more electricity but isn’t a very efficient way to gather heat.

That’s a problem of economics. Good solar hot-water systems can harvest much more energy than a solar-electric system at a substantially lower cost. And it’s also a space problem: photovoltaic cells can take up all the space on the roof, leaving little room for thermal applications. In a pair of studies, Joshua Pearce, an associate professor of materials science and engineering, has devised a solution in the form of a better PVT made with a different kind of silicon. His research collaborators are Kunal Girotra from Thin Silicon in California and Michael Pathak and Stephen Harrison from Queen’s University, Canada.

Most solar panels are made with crystalline silicon, but you can also make solar cells out of amorphous silicon, commonly known as thin-film silicon. They don’t create as much electricity, but they are lighter, flexible, and cheaper. And, because they require much less silicon, they have a greener footprint. Unfortunately, thin-film silicon solar cells are vulnerable to some bad-news physics in the form of the Staebler-Wronski effect.

“That means that their efficiency drops when you expose them to light—pretty much the worst possible effect for a solar cell,” Pearce explains, which is one of the reasons thin-film solar panels make up only a small fraction of the market.

However, Pearce and his team found a way to engineer around the Staebler-Wronski effect by incorporating thin-film silicon in a new type of PVT. You don’t have to cool down thin-film silicon to make it work. In fact, Pearce’s group discovered that by heating it to solar-thermal operating temperatures, near the boiling point of water, they could make thicker cells that largely overcame the Staebler-Wronski effect. When they applied the thin-film silicon directly to a solar thermal energy collector, they also found that by baking the cell once a day, they boosted the solar cell’s electrical efficiency by over 10 percent.

第十四篇Sharks Perform a Service for Earth's Waters(鲨鱼有益于地球水系)

It is hard to get people to think of sharks as anything but a deadly enemy1. They are thought to attack people frequently. But these fish2 perform a valuable service for earth's waters and for human beings. Yet business and sport fishing3 are threatening their existence Some sharks are at risk of disappearing from Earth Warm weather may influence both fish and shark activity. Many fish swim near coastal areas because of their warm waters. Experts say sharks may follow the fish into the same areas, where people also swim. In fact, most sharks do not purposely charge at or bite humans. They are thought to mistake a person for a sea animal, such as a seal or sea lion. That is why people should not swim in the ocean when the sun goes down or comes up. Those are the times when sharks are looking for food. Experts also say that bright colors and shiny jewelry may cause sharks to attack.

A shark has an extremely good sense of smell4' It can find small amounts of substances in water, such as blood, body liquids and chemicals produced by animals. These powerful senses help sharks fred their food. Sharks eat fish, any other sharks, and plants that live in the ocean.

Medical researchers want to learn more about the shark's body defense, and immune systems against disease. Researchers know that sharks recover quickly from injuries. They study the shark in hopes of finding a way to fight human disease.

Sharks are important for the world's oceans They eat injured and diseased fish. Their hunting activities mean that the numbers of other fish in ocean waters do not become too great This protects the plants and other forms of life that exist in the oceans.

第十五篇“Liquefaction” Key to Much of Japanese Earthquake Damage (“液化”是日本地震破坏的关键)

The massive subduction zone1 earthquake in Japan caused a significant level of soil \its widespread severity, a new analysis shows. \seen localized3 examples of soil liquefaction as extreme as this before, but the

distance and extent of damage in Japan were unusually severe,\said Scott Ashford, a professor of geotechnical engineering4 at Oregon State University5. \structures were tilted and sinking into the sediments,\Ashford said. \pipelines6, crippling the utilities and infrastructure these communities need to function. We saw some places that sank as much as four feet.\

Some degree of soil liquefaction7 is common in almost any major earthquake. It's a phenomenon in which soils soaked with water, particularly recent sediments or sand, can lose much of their strength and flow during an earthquake. This can allow structures to shift or sink or collapse . But most earthquakes are much shorter than the recent event in Japan, Ashford said. The length of the Japanese earthquake, as much as five minutes, may force researchers to reconsider the extent of liquefaction damage possibly occurring in situations such as this.

\such a long-lasting earthquake, we saw how structures that might have been okay after 30 seconds just continued to sink and tilt as the shaking continued for several more minutes,\said. \it was clear that younger sediments, and especially areas built on recently filled ground, are much more vulnerable.\

The data provided by analyzing the Japanese earthquake, researchers said, should make it possible to improve the understanding of this soil phenomenon and better prepare for it in the future. Ashford said it was critical for the team to collect the information quickly, before damage was removed in the recovery efforts.

\no doubt that we'll learn things from what happened in Japan10 that11 will help us to reduce risks in other similar events ,\Ashford said. \construction in some places may make more use of techniques known to reduce liquefaction, such as better compaction to make soils dense, or use of reinforcing stone columns.\Ashford pointed out that northern California have younger soils vulnerable to liquefaction ---on the coast, near river deposits or in areas with filled ground. The \sediments, in geologic terms, may be those deposited within the past 10,000 years or more. In Oregon, for instance, that describes much of downtown Portland, the Portland International Airport and other cities. Anything near a river and old flood plains is a suspect12, and the Oregon Department of

Transportation has already concluded that 1,100 bridges in the state are at risk from an earthquake. Fewer than 15 percent of them have been reinforced to prevent collapse. Japan has suffered tremendous losses in the March 11 earthquake, but Japanese construction standards helped prevent many buildings from collapse ---even as they tilted and sank into the ground.