Lesson 42 Recording an earthquake

Lesson 42 Recording an earthquake 歌词

歌曲 Lesson 42 Recording an earthquake
歌手 英语听力
专辑 新概念英语(第四册)
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[00:01.47] Lesson 42
[00:03.45] Recording an earthquake
[00:11.47] What does a pen have to do to record on paper the vibrations generated by an earthquake?
[00:19.70] An earthquake comes like a thief in the night, without warning.
[00:24.83] It was necessary, therefore, to invent instruments that neither slumbered nor slept.
[00:31.38] Some devices were quite simple.
[00:33.83] One, for instance, consisted of rods of various lengths and thicknesses which would stand up on end like ninepins.
[00:41.76] When a shock came, it shook the rigid table upon which these stood.
[00:47.32] If it were gentle, only the more unstable rods fell.
[00:51.64] If it were severe, they all fell.
[00:54.65] Thus the rods, by falling, and by the direction in which they fell,
[00:59.67] recorded for the slumbering scientist the strength of a shock that was too weak to waken him,
[01:05.62] and the direction from which it came.
[01:09.39] But instruments far more delicate than that were needed if any really serious advance was to be made.
[01:17.67] The ideal to be aimed at was to devise an instrument that could record with a pen on paper,
[01:24.33] the movements of the ground or of the table as the quake passed by.
[01:29.99] While I write my pen moves, but the paper keeps still.
[01:35.03] With practice, no doubt, I could in time learn to write by holding the pen still while the paper moved.
[01:42.15] That sounds a silly suggestion,
[01:44.45] but that was precisely the idea adopted in some of the early instruments (seismometers) for recording earthquake waves.
[01:54.25] But when table, penholder and paper are all moving, how is it possible to write legibly?
[02:02.40] The key to a solution of that problem lay in an everyday observation.
[02:07.97] Why does a person standing in a bus or train tend to fall when a sudden start is made?
[02:15.73] It is because his feet move on, but his head stays still.
[02:21.17] A simple experiment will help us a little further.
[02:25.02] Tie a heavy weight at the end of a long piece of string.
[02:29.53] With the hand held high in the air, hold the string so that the weight nearly touches the ground.
[02:36.32] Now move the hand to and fro and around but not up and down.
[02:41.93] It will be found that the weight moves but slightly or not at all.
[02:47.50] Imagine a pen attached to the weight in such a way that its point rests upon a piece of paper on the floor.
[02:56.08] Imagine an earthquake shock shaking the floor, the paper, you and your hand.
[03:02.96] In the midst of all this movement, the weight and the pen would be still.
[03:08.48] But as the paper moved from side to side under the pen point, its movement would be recorded in ink upon its surface.
[03:16.83] It was upon this principle that the first instruments were made, but the paper was wrapped round a drum which rotated slowly.
[03:25.96] As long as all was still, the pen drew a straight line,
[03:30.63] but while the drum was being shaken, the line that the pen was drawing wriggled from side to side.
[03:38.00] The apparatus thus described, however,
[03:40.25] records only the horizontal component of the wave movement, which is, in fact, much more complicated.
[03:48.12] If we could actually see the path described by a particle,
[03:51.63] such as a sand grain in the rock,
[03:54.41] it would be more like that of a bluebottle buzzing round the room; it would be up and down, to and fro and from side to side.
[04:04.45] Instruments have been devised and can be so placed that all three elements can be recorded in different graphs.
[04:13.37] When the instrument is situated at more than 700 miles from the earthquake centre,
[04:18.83] the graphic record shows three waves arriving one after the other at short intervals.
[04:25.57] The first records the arrival of longitudinal vibrations.
[04:30.84] The second marks the arrival of transverse vibrations which travel more slowly and arrive several minutes after the first.
[04:39.70] These two have travelled through the earth.
[00:01.47] 第42课
[00:03.45] 记录地震
[00:11.47] 在纸上记录地震所引起的震动时,钢笔需要做什么?
[00:19.70] 地震就像夜间的小偷,不打招呼就来了。
[00:24.83] 因此,有必要发明一种仪器,既不打盹,也不睡觉。
[00:31.38] 有些装置非常简单。
[00:33.83] 例如,有一种装置是由一些长短、粗细不同的木棒组成,就像九柱戏的木棒一样竖立着。
[00:41.76] 一旦有地震,就会震动竖立在坚硬桌子上的木棒。
[00:47.32] 如果地震轻微,只有不稳定的木棒倒下。
[00:51.64] 如果地震剧烈,所有的木棒都会倒下。
[00:54.65] 因此,通过其倒下的方向,
[00:59.67] 在地震的强度太弱不足以惊醒熟睡中的科学家的时候,
[01:05.62] 这些木棒记录了地震发生的方向。
[01:09.39] 但是,如果要取得真正的重大进展,需要比这种装置精细得多的仪器。
[01:17.67] 理想的目标是设计出这样一种仪器:
[01:24.33] 当地震发生时,它能用笔在纸上记录下大地和桌子的运动情况。
[01:29.99] 当我写字时,笔是移动的,纸是静止的。
[01:35.03] 毫无疑问,通过训练,我最终能学会在笔不动而纸移动的情况下写字。
[01:42.15] 这听起来似乎是一种愚蠢的想法,
[01:44.45] 但是早期记录地震波的仪器(测震仪)正是采用了这种思路。
[01:54.25] 可是,当桌子、笔杆、纸都在移动时,怎么能书写的清楚呢?
[02:02.40] 可以从我们的日常生活观察中找到这个问题的答案。
[02:07.97] 当车突然开动时,站在公共汽车或火车上的人为什么会有要摔倒的倾向呢?
[02:15.73] 这是因为他的脚动了,而他的头保持着静止。
[02:21.17] 一个简单的实验可以帮助我们进一步理解这个问题。
[02:25.02] 把一个重物拴在一根长绳子的一端,
[02:29.53] 把手高举在空中握住绳子,使重物几乎接触地面。
[02:36.32] 现在把手来回以及旋转摆动,但不要上下摆动,
[02:41.93] 结果会发现,重物运动的幅度很小,甚至根本没动。
[02:47.50] 假定按照这样一种方式把笔拴在重物上,使笔尖悬停在地板上一张纸上方。
[02:56.08] 假定地震发生了,地板、纸、你和你的手都会发生震动,
[03:02.96] 在这些运动发生时,重物和笔保持静止。
[03:08.48] 但是由于笔尖下方的纸张作往复运动,其运动情况就会被墨水记录在纸张上。
[03:16.83] 根据这一原理,制造出了最初的地震仪器,但是纸张是卷在缓慢旋转的圆筒上的。
[03:25.96] 只要一切都是静止的,笔就会画一条直线;
[03:30.63] 但是当圆筒受到震动时,笔所画出来的线就会左右摆动。
[03:38.00] 然而,这里所描述的这种仪器,
[03:40.25] 记录下来的只是地震波的水平分量,地震波的运动实际比这要复杂得多。
[03:48.12] 假如我们真能看到所描述的一个粒子的运动轨迹,
[03:51.63] 比方说岩石中的沙粒,
[03:54.41] 其运动轨迹就像一只嗡嗡叫的绿头苍蝇在屋内的飞行轨迹,呈现出上上下下、来来回回、左左右右三种运动形式。
[04:04.45] 已经设计出了一些仪器,把它们按照一定的方式安放就可以记录下这三种运动形式的曲线图。
[04:13.37] 如果把这种仪器安放在距离震中700多英里远的地方,
[04:18.83] 其记录的曲线表明,这三种形式的波会在比较短的时间间隔内先后到达。
[04:25.57] 首先记录下来的纵向波的到达。
[04:30.84] 然后记录下来的是横向波的达到,横向波比纵向波传播得慢,在纵向波到达几分钟后才能到达。
[04:39.70] 这两种波都是穿过地球而来的。
Lesson 42 Recording an earthquake 歌词
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