Lesson 14
The Butterfly Effect
蝴蝶效应
First listen and then answer the following question.
听录音,然后回答以下问题。
Why do small errors make it impossible to predict the weather system with a high degree of accuracy?
Beyond two or three days, the world's best weather forecasts are speculative, and beyond six or seven they are worthless.
The Butterfly Effect is the reason. For small pieces of weather -- and to a global forecaster, small can mean thunderstorms and blizzards -- any prediction deteriorates rapidly. Errors and uncertainties multiply, cascading upward through a chain of turbulent features, from dust devils and squalls up to continent-size eddies that only satellites can see.
The modern weather models work with a grid of points of the order of sixty miles apart, and even so, some starting data has to guessed, since ground stations and satellites cannot see everywhere. But suppose the earth could be covered with sensors spaced one foot apart, rising at one-foot intervals all the way to the top of the atmosphere. Suppose every sensor gives perfectly accurate readings of temperature, pressure, humidity, and any other quantity a meteorologist would want. Precisely at noon an infinitely powerful computer takes all the data and calculates what will happen at each point at 12.01, then 1202, then 12.03...
The computer will still be unable to predict whether Princeton, New Jersey, will have sun or rain on a day one month away. At noon the spaces between the sensors will hide fluctuations that the computer will not know about, tiny deviations from the average. By 12.01, those fluctuations will already have created small errors one foot away. Soon the errors will have multiplied to the ten-foot scale, and so on up to the size of the globe.
JAMES GLEICK, Chaos
New words and expressions 生词和短语
forecast
n. 预报
speculative
adj. 推测的
blizzard
n. 暴风雪
deteriorate
v. 变坏
multiply
v. 增加
cascade
v. 瀑布似地落下
turbulent
adj. 狂暴的
dust devil
小尘暴,尘旋风
squall
n. 暴风
eddy
n. 旋涡
grid
n. 坐标方格
sensor
n. 传感器
humidity
n. 温度
meteorologist
n. 气象学家
Princeton
n. 普林斯顿(美国城市名)
New Jersey
n. 新泽西(美国州名)
fluctuation
n. 起伏,波动
deviation
n. 偏差
参考译文
世界上最好的两三天以上的天气预报具有很强的猜测性,如果超过六七天,天气预报就没有了任何价值。
原因是蝴蝶效应。对于小片的恶劣天气 -- 对一个全球性的气象预报员来说,“小”可以意味着雷暴雨和暴风雪 -- 任何预测的质量会很快下降。错误和不可靠性上升,接踵而来的是一系列湍流的徵状,从小尘暴和暴风发展到只有卫星上可以看到的席卷整块大陆的旋涡。
现代气象模型以一个坐标图来显示,图中每个点大约是间隔60英里。既使是这样,有些开始时的资料也不得不依靠推测,因为地面工作站和卫星不可能看到地球上的每一个地方。假设地球上可以布满传感器,每个相隔1英尺,并按1英尺的间隔从地面一直排列到大气层的顶端。再假定每个传感器都极极端准确地读出了温度、气压、温度和气象学家需要的任何其他数据。在正午时分,一个功能巨大的计算机搜集了所有的资料,并算出在每一个点上12:01、12:02、12:03时可能出现的情况。
计算机无法推断出1个月以后的某一天,新泽西州的普林斯顿究竟是晴天还是雨天。正午时分,传感器之间的距离会掩盖计算机无法知道的波动、任何偏平均值的变化。到12:01时,那些波动就已经会在1英尺远的地方造成偏差。很快这种偏差会增加到尺10英的范围,如此等等,一直到全球的范围。
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新概念英语第二册英音版 87-A Perfect Alibi
新概念英语第二册英音版 70-Red for Danger
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新概念英语第二册英音版 82-Monster or Fish
新概念英语第二册英音版 56-Faster Than Sound
新概念英语第二册英音版 63-She Was Not Amused
新概念英语第二册英音版 44-Through the Forest
新概念英语第二册英音版 53-Hot Snake
新概念英语第二册英音版 51-Reward for Virtue
新概念英语第二册英音版 58-A Blessing in Disguise
新概念英语第二册英音版 67-Volcanoes
新概念英语第二册英音版 46-Expensive and Uncomfortable
新概念英语第二册英音版 75-SOS
新概念英语第二册英音版 77-A Successful Operation
新概念英语第二册英音版 43-Over the South Pole
新概念英语第二册英音版 64-The Channel Tunnel
新概念英语第二册英音版 61-Trouble with the Hubble
新概念英语第二册英音版 72-A Car Called Bluebird
新概念英语第二册英音版 71-A Famous Clock
新概念英语第二册英音版 42-Not Very Musical
新概念英语第二册英音版 60-The Future
新概念英语第二册英音版 66-Sweet as Honey
新概念英语第二册英音版 80-The Crystal Palace
新概念英语第二册英音版 88-Trapped in a Mine
新概念英语第二册英音版 45-A Clear Conscience
新概念英语第二册英音版 62-After the Fire
新概念英语第二册英音版 78-The Last One