TPO-29-L4

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TPO 29 Carbon Nanotubes

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What is the main purpose of the lecture?
  • A . To help students understand what is required to launch a satellite

  • B . To describe new materials now being used to explore space

  • C . To describe a potential technology for space exploration

  • D . To show how ideas from science fiction often develop into actual technologies

显示答案 正确答案: C
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    Listen to part of a lecture in a structural engineering class.
    Today let's begin to look at structural engineering in the Space Age. Uh, new problems... new possibilities mean we can think in new ways, find radically different approaches. So let's consider... uh, well, what would you say is the biggest obstacle today to putting structures, equipment, people... uh, anything really, into space?
    Well, the cost, right?
    Exactly. I mean, just taking the space shuttle up and back one time is hugely expensive. Uh, why?
    I guess a lot of it is for fuel, right? To... to get the rocket going fast enough.
    OK. Fast enough to...
    To escape Earth's gravity.
    Good. So we are burning up an enormous amount of fuel at every launch just to get the rocket up to what's known as escape velocity. Now, escape velocity is around 11 kilometers a second, pretty fast. But do we really have to go this fast?
    Well, yeah. I mean, how else can you, um... escape? I mean, that's the whole point of escape velocity, right?Otherwise gravity will pull you back down to the Earth.
    Actually, that's a common misconception. Escape velocity is simply the speed of an object that's... uh, let's say, shot out of a cannon the minimum initial speed, so that the object could later escape Earth's gravity on its own. But that's just if there's no additional force being applied. If you keep on supplying force to the object, keep on pushing it upward. It could pull away from Earth's gravity at any speed.
    Even really slow? So you're saying... like, if you had a ladder tall enough, you could just climb into space?
    Yeah! Uh, well, theoretically. I mean, I can see some practical problems with the ladder example. Uh, like you might get just a little bit tired out after the first few thousand kilometers or so, uh, especially with all the oxygen tanks you'll have to be hauling up with you.
    No. I was thinking more along the lines of an elevator.
    Wait! You are serious?
    Sure. An elevator. That's a new idea to most of us, but in fact it's been around for over a century. If we could power such an elevator with solar energy, we could simply rise up into space for a fraction of the cost of a trip by rocket or shuttle.
    But wait, elevators don't just rise up.They have to hang on some kind of wire or track or something.
    Uh, true. And for decades that's exactly what's prevented the idea from being feasible or even just taken seriously. Where do we find the material strong enough yet lightweight enough to act as a cable or track. I mean, we are talking 36,000 kilometers here. And the strain on the cable would be more than most materials could bear.
    But a new material developed recently has a tensile strength higher than diamond, yet it's much more flexible. I am talking about carbon nanotubes.
    OK. I've read something about carbon nanotubes. They are strong, alright, but aren't they just very short little cylinders in shape?
    Ah, yes. But these cylinders cling together at a molecular level. You pull out one nanotube or a row of nanotubes, and its neighbor's come with it, and their neighbors, and so on. So you could actually draw out a 36,000-kilometer strand or ribbon of nanotubes stronger than steel, but maybe a thousandth the thickness of a human hair.
    OK. Fine. But what's going to hold this ribbon up and keep it rigid enough to support an elevator car?
    Well, we definitely have to anchor it at both ends. So what we need is a really tall tower here on the ground right at the equator and a satellite in geostationary orbit around the Earth. There's a reason I mentioned that figure of 36,000 kilometers. That's about how high an object would have to be orbiting straight up from the equator to constantly remain directly above the exact same spot on the rotating planet Earth. So once you are in this geostationary orbit right over the tower, just lower your carbon nanotube cable down from the satellite, tether it to the tower here on Earth and there you have it!
    So you really think this is a possibility? Like, how soon could it happen?
    Well, the science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke talked about building a space elevator back in the 1970s. And when someone asked him when he thought this idea might become a reality, his reply was, "Probably about fifty years after everybody quits laughing".

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    听一段结构工程课程上的演讲
    今天我们来看看太空时代的结构工程学。。新的问题,新的可能性意味着我们能够用新的方式思考,找到全新的方法。我们来考虑一下,你觉得现当今把构造,设备,人类运送到太空中面临的最大困难是什么?
    嗯,费用,对吧?
    没错。仅仅发射太空器到太空再把它们召回一次的费用就很高。为什么?
    我想有很大部分都用在了燃料上,对吧?为了让火箭速度够快。
    足够快干什么?
    快到能摆脱地球引力。
    没错。每一次发射我们都会燃烧大量燃料以使火箭到达宇宙速度。宇宙速度大约是11千米每秒,非常快。但是我们真的需要达到这么快的速度么?
    是的。还有什么其他办法能摆脱地球引力呢?我的意思是,宇宙速度就是这个意思不是么?如果不到达宇宙速度的话引力会把火箭拉回地球的。
    事实上,这是个非常普遍的误解。宇宙速度只是一个物体,比如一个从加农炮里射出的物体,要有的最小的能使它之后能靠自己摆脱地球引力的速度,但是这是仅指没有其他外力作用于这个物体的情况。如果你在发射过程中不断的对这个物体施加外力,不断的把它向前推,那不管它最初速度多大,最终它都有可能摆脱地球引力
    就算初速度非常低也可以?这就好比如,如果你有个足够高的梯子,你就能沿着梯子爬到太空中?
    没错!理论上讲是这样。但是你的梯子例子面临着一些实际操作上的问题。比如你在爬了几千米之后会很累,尤其是当你还拖着一堆氧气瓶的时候。
    我觉得电梯更适合。
    等等!你是认真的么?
    没错,电梯!对我们所有人来说这个想法可能很新鲜,但是其实一个世纪前就有人这么构想过了。如果我们能用太阳能对这样一个电梯供能,我们就能以用火箭或者飞行器的费用的几分之一的费用进入太空。
    但是,电梯不能仅靠自己上升。它需要在一个轨道上运作。
    没错。几十年来就是这个想法阻碍了电梯的发展,也阻碍了人们严肃的考虑它的可行性我们到哪里去找这样一个能承重并且超轻的材料做电梯的轨道或者绳索呢?绳索足足有36000千米。这个绳索将承受极大的压力,大到大多数材料都不能承受。
    但是一种新开发的材料有比钻石还强的延展能力,而且很有柔韧性。它,就是碳纳米管。
    我读到过碳纳米管。它们承重能力很强是没错,但从形状上来说,它们不就是非常短小的圆柱么?
    是的。但是这些圆柱在分子层面上可以聚合在一起。从一个或者一排纳米管开始,临近的纳米管会聚合,然后再临近再聚合所以实际上你可以做一个比钢铁承重能力强但是只有头发千分之一细的36000千米的纳米管。
    的。 那如何才能保持这个管子不断向上并且达到电梯要达到的高度呢?
    我们必须在两端固定这个管子。所以我们需要在赤道上建一个很高的塔,然后还需要一个和地球旋转周期同步的卫星。我先前提到过36000千米,因为36000千米是赤道上空环绕物体要保持与地球相对静止的运动的轨道高度。你把卫星发射到赤道塔上空的地球旋转同步轨道后,你可以从卫星上垂下碳纳米管,然后把这一端固定在地球上。然后就成功了!
    所以你觉得有这可能性?还要多久才能实现?
    科幻小说家Authur C. Clarke早在1970年代就提出过建造一个太空电梯的想法。当有人问他觉得什么时候这个想法能变成现实时,他回答说,也许在人们停止嘲笑这个想法的50年之后就能实现。

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听力讲的就是用一种新型材料建造能通往宇宙的 elevator,但这只是一个构想。与 C 对应。

当前解析由chien提供

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