The Pathfinder

Striking Back at Lightning With Lasers

Striking Back at Lightning With Lasers

Seldom is the weather more dramatic than when thunderstorms strike. Their electrical fury inflicts death or serious injury on around 500 people each year in the United States alone. As the clouds roll in, a leisurely round of golf can become a terrifying dice with death – out in the open, alone golfer maybe a lightning bolt’s most inviting target. And there is damage to property too. Lightning damage costs American power companies more than $100 million a year.
 
But researchers in the United States and Japan are planning to hit back. Already in laboratory trials, they have tested strategies for neutralizing the power of thunderstorms, and this winter they will brave real storms, equipped with an armoury of lasers that they will be pointing towards the heavens to discharge thunderclouds before lightning can strike.
 
The idea of forcing storm clouds to discharge their lightning on command is not new. In the early 1960s, researchers tried firing rockets trailing wires into thunderclouds to set up an easy discharge path for the huge electric charges that these clouds generate. The technique survives to this day at a test site in Florida run by the University of Florida, with support from the Electrical Power Research Institute (EPRI), based in California. EPRI, which is funded by power companies is looking at ways to protect the United States’ power grid from lightning strikes. ‘We can cause the lightning to strike where we want it to using rockets,’ says Ralph Bernstein, manager of lightning projects at EPRI. The rocket site is providing precise measurements of lightning voltages and allowing engineers to check how electrical equipment bears up.
 
Bad behavior
But while rockets are fine for research, they cannot provide the protection from lightning strikes that everyone is looking for. The rockets cost around $1,200 each, can only be fired at a limited frequency and their failure rate is about 40 percent. And even when they do trigger lightning, things still do not always go according to plan. ‘Lightning is not perfectly well behaved,’ says Bernstein. ‘Occasionally, it will take a branch and go someplace it wasn’t supposed to go.’
 
And anyway, who would want to fire streams of rockets in a populated area? ‘What goes up must come down,’ points out Jean-Claude Diels of the University of New Mexico. Diels is leading a project, which is backed by EPRI to try to use lasers to discharge lightning safely- and safety is a basic requirement since no one wants to put themselves or their expensive equipment at risk. With around $500,000 invested so far, a promising system is just emerging from the laboratory.
 
The idea began some 20 years ago when high-powered lasers were revealing their ability to extract electrons out of atoms and create ions. If a laser could generate a line of ionization in the air all the way up to a storm cloud, this conducting path could be used to guide lightning to Earth, before the electric field becomes strong enough to break down the air in an uncontrollable urge. To stop the laser itself from being struck, it would not be pointed straight at the clouds. Instead, it would be directed at a mirror and from there into the sky. The mirror would be protected by placing lightning conductors close by. Ideally, the cloud-zapper (gun) would be cheap enough to be installed around all key power installations, and portable enough to be taken to international sporting events to beam up at brewing storm clouds.
 
A stumbling block
However, there is still a big stumbling block. The laser is no nifty portable: it’s a monster that takes up a whole room. Diels is trying to cut down the sizeand says that a laser around the size of a small table is in the offing. He plans to test this more manageable system on live thunderclouds next summer. Bernstein says that Diels’s system is attracting lots of interest from the power companies.
 
But they have not yet come up with the $5 million that EPRI says will be needed to develop a commercial system, by making the lasers yet smaller and cheaper. I cannot say I have the money yet, but I’m working on it,’ says Bernstein. He reckons that the forthcoming field tests will be the turning point – and he’s hoping for good news. Bernstein predicts ‘an avalanche of interest and support’ if all goes well. He expects to see cloud-zappers eventually costing $50,000 to $100,000 each.
 
Other scientists could also benefit. With a lightning ‘switch’ at their fingertips, materials scientists could find out what happens when mighty currents meet matter. Diels also hopes to see the birth of ‘interactive meteorology’ – not just forecasting the weather but controlling it. ‘If we could discharge clouds, we might affect the weather,’ he says.
 
And perhaps, says Diels, we’ll be able to confront some other meteorological menaces. ‘We think we could prevent hail by inducing lightning,’ he says. Thunder, the shock wave that comes from a lightning flash, is thought to be the trigger for the torrential rain that is typical of storms. A laser thunder factory could shake the moisture out of clouds, perhaps preventing the formation of the giant hailstones that threaten crops. With luck, as the storm clouds gather this winter, laser-toting researchers could, for the first time, strike back.
SECTION 1: QUESTIONS 1-13

Question (1)

Questions 4-6

Complete the sentences below.

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 4-6 on your answer sheet.

EPRI receives financial support from 4 

The advantage of the technique being developed by Diels is that it can be used 

The main difficulty associated with using the laser equipment is related to its

Questions 7 – 10

Questions 7-10

Complete the summary using the list of words, A-I, below.

Write the correct letter, A-I, in boxes 7-10 on your answer sheet.

A cloud-zappers   

B atoms

C storm clouds

D mirrors

E technique

F ions

G rockets

H conductors   

I thunder

In this method, a laser is used to create a line of ionisation by removing electrons from 7  This laser is then directed at 8   in order to control electrical charges, a method which is less dangerous than using 9  As a protection for the lasers, the beams are aimed firstly at 10 .

Question (11)

The Nature of Genius

There has always been ari interest in geniuses and prodigies. The word ‘genius’, from the Latin gens (= family) and the term ‘genius’, meaning ‘begetter’, comes from the early Roman cult of divinity as the head of the family. In its earliest form, genius was concerned with the ability of the head of the family, the paterfamilias, to perpetuate himself. Gradually, genius came to represent a person’s characteristics, and thence an individual’s highest attributes derived from his ‘genius’ or guiding spirit. Today, people still look to stars or genes, astrology or genetics, in the hope of finding the source of exceptional abilities or personal characteristics.
 
The concept of genius and of gifts has become part of our folk culture, and attitudes are ambivalent towards them. We envy the gifted and mistrust them. In the mythology of giftedness, it is popularly believed that if people are talented in one area, they must be defective in another, that intellectuals are impractical, that prodigies burn too brightly too soon and burn out that gifted people are eccentric, that they are physical weaklings, that there’s a thin line between genius and madness, that genius runs in families that the gifted are so clever they don’t need special help, that giftedness is the same as having a high IQ, that some races are more intelligent or musical or mathematical than others, that genius goes unrecognized and unrewarded, that adversity makes men wise or that people with gifts have a responsibility to use them. Language has been enriched with such terms as ‘highbrow’, ‘egghead’, ‘blue-stocking, ‘wiseacre’, ‘know-all’, ‘boffin’ and, for many, ‘intellectual’ is a term of denigration.
 
The nineteenth century saw considerable interest in the nature of genius and produced not a few studies of famous prodigies. Perhaps for us today, two of the most significant aspects of most of these studies of genius are the frequency with which early encouragement and teaching by parents and tutors had beneficial effects on the intellectual, artistic, or musical development of the children but caused great difficulties of adjustment later in their lives, and the frequency with which abilities went unrecognized by teachers and schools. However, the difficulty with the evidence produced by these studies, fascinating as they are in collecting together anecdotes and apparent similarities and exceptions, is that they are not what we would today call norm-referenced. In other words, when, for instance, information is collated about early illnesses, methods of upbringing, schooling, etc., we must also take into account information from other historical sources about how common or exceptional these were at the time. For instance, infant mortality was high and life expectancy much shorter than today, home tutoring was common in the families of the nobility and wealthy, bullying and corporal punishment was common at the best independent schools and, for the most part, the cases studied were members of the privileged classes. It was only with the growth of pediatrics and psychology in the twentieth century that studies could be carried out on a more objective if still not always very scientific, basis.
 
Geniuses, however, they are defined, are but the peaks which stand out through the mist of history and are visible to the particular observer from his or her particular vantage point. Change the observers and the vantage points, clear away some of the mist, and a different lot of peaks appear. Genius is a term we apply to those whom we recognize for their outstanding achievements and who stand near the end of the continuum of human abilities which reaches back through the mundane and mediocre to the incapable. There is still much truth in Dr. Samuel Johnson’s observation, The true genius Is a mind of large general powers, accidentally determined to some particular direction’. We may disagree with the ‘general’, for we doubt if all musicians of genius could have become scientists of genius or vice versa, but there is no doubting the accidental determination which nurtured or triggered their gifts into those channels into which they have poured their powers so successfully. Along the continuum of abilities are hundreds of thousands of gifted men and women, boys and girls.
 
What we appreciate, enjoy or marvel at in thè works of genius or the achievements of prodigies are the manifestations of skills or abilities which are similar to, but so much superior to, our own. But that their minds are not different from our own is demonstrated by the fact that the hard-won discoveries of scientists like Kepler or Einstein become the commonplace knowledge of schoolchildren and the once outrageous shapes and colors of an artist like Paul Klee so soon appear on the fabrics we wear. This does not minimize the supremacy of their achievements, which outstrip our own as the sub-four-minute milers outstrip our jogging.
 
To think of geniuses and the gifted as having uniquely different brains is only reasonable If we accept that each human brain is uniquely different. The purpose of instruction is to make the US even more different from one another, and in the process of being educated, we can learn from the achievements of those more gifted than ourselves. But before we try to emulate geniuses or encourage our children to do so we should note that some of the things we learn from them may prove unpalatable. We may envy their achievements and fame, but we should also recognize the price they may have paid in terms of perseverance, single-mindedness, dedication, restrictions on their personal lives, the demands upon their energies and time and how often they had to display great courage to preserve their integrity or to make their way to the top.
 
Genius and giftedness are relative descriptive terms of no real substance. We may, at best, give them some precision by defining them and placing them in a context but, whatever we do, we should never delude ourselves into believing that gifted children or geniuses are different from the rest of humanity, save in the degree to which they have developed the performance of their abilities.
SECTION 2: QUESTIONS 14-26

Questions 14 – 18

Questions 14-18

Choose FIVE letters, A-K.

Write the correct letters in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet

NB Your answers may be given in any order.

Below are listed some popular beliefs about genius and giftedness.

Which FIVE of these beliefs are reported by the writer of the text?


Truly gifted people are talented in all areas.
 
The talents of geniuses are soon exhausted.
 
Gifted people should use their gifts.
 
A genius appears once in every generation.
 
Genius can be easily destroyed by discouragement.
 
Genius is inherited.
 
Gifted people are very hard to live with.
 
People never appreciate true genius.
 
Geniuses are natural leaders.
 
Gifted people develop their greatness through difficulties.
 
Genius will always reveal itself.
  • A 
  • B 
  • C 
  • D 
  • E 
  • F 
  • G 
  • H 
  • I 
  • J 
  • K 

Question (19)

HOW DOES THE BIOLOGICAL CLOCK TICK?

A – Limitations of life span

Our life span is restricted. Everyone accepts this as ‘biologically’ obvious. ‘Nothing lives for ever!’ However, in this statement we think of artificially produced, technical objects, products which are subjected to natural wear and tear during use. This leads to the result that at some time or other the object stops working and is unusable (‘death’ in the biological sense). But are the wear and tear and loss of function of technical objects and the death of living organisms really similar or comparable?

B – Fundamental differences in ageing of objects and organisms

Our ‘dead’ products are ‘static’, closed systems. It is always the basic material which constitutes the object and which, in the natural course of things, is worn down and becomes ‘older’. Ageing in this case must occur according to the laws of physical chemistry and of thermodynamics. Although the same law holds for a living organism, the result of this law is not inexorable in the same way. At least as long as a biological system has the ability to renew itself it could actually become older without ageing; an organism is an open, dynamic system through which new material continuously flows. Destruction of old material and formation of new material are thus in permanent dynamic equilibrium. The material of which the organism is formed changes continuously. Thus our bodies continuously exchange old substance for new, just like a spring which more or less maintains its form and movement, but in which the water molecules are always different.

C – Why dying is beneficial

Thus ageing and death should not be seen as inevitable, particularly as the organism possesses many mechanisms for repair. It is not, in principle, necessary for a biological system to age and die. Nevertheless, a restricted life span, ageing, and then death are basic characteristics of life. The reason for this is easy to recognise: in nature, the existent organisms either adapt or are regularly replaced by new types. Because of changes in the genetic material (mutations) these have new characteristics and in the course of their individual lives they are tested for optimal or better adaptation to the environmental conditions. Immortality would disturb this system – it needs room for new and better life. This is the basic problem of evolution.

D – A stable life span despite improvements

Every organism has a life span which is highly characteristic. There are striking differences in life span between different species, but within one species the parameter is relatively constant. For example, the average duration of human life has hardly changed in thousands of years. Although more and more people attain an advanced age as a result of developments in medical care and better nutrition, the characteristic upper limit for most remains 80 years. A further argument against the simple wear and tear theory is the observation that the time within which organisms age lies between a few days (even a few hours for unicellular organisms) and several thousand years, as with mammoth trees.

E – The biological clock

If a life span is a genetically determined biological characteristic, it is logically necessary to propose the existence of an internal clock, which in some way measures and controls the ageing process and which finally determines death as the last step in a fixed programme. Like the life span, the metabolic rate has for different organisms a fixed mathematical relationship to the body mass. In comparison to the life span this relationship is ‘inverted’: the larger the organism the lower its metabolic rate. Again this relationship is valid not only for birds, but also, similarly on average within the systematic unit, for all other organisms (plants, animals, unicellular organisms).

F – Energy consumption

Animals which behave ‘frugally’ with energy become particularly old, for example, crocodiles and tortoises. Parrots and birds of prey are often held chained up. Thus they are not able to ‘experience life’ and so they attain a high life span in captivity. Animals which save energy by hibernation or lethargy (e.g. bats or hedgehogs) live much longer than those which are always active. The metabolic rate of mice can be reduced by a very low consumption of food (hunger diet). They then may live twice as long as their well fed comrades. Women become distinctly (about 10 per cent) older than men. If you examine the metabolic rates of the two sexes you establish that the higher male metabolic rate roughly accounts for the lower male life span. That means that they live life ‘energetically’ – more intensively, but not for as long.

G – Prolonging your life

It follows from the above that sparing use of energy reserves should tend to extend life. Extreme high performance sports may lead to optimal cardiovascular performance, but they quite certainly do not prolong life. Relaxation lowers metabolic rate, as does adequate sleep and in general an equable and balanced personality. Each of us can develop his or her own ‘energy saving programme’ with a little self-observation, critical self-control and, above all, logical consistency. Experience will show that to live in this way not only increases the life span but is also very healthy. This final aspect should not be forgotten.

SECTION 3: QUESTIONS 27-41

Question (27)

 
29
Paragraph D
  • A 
  • B 
  • C 
  • D 
  • E 
  • F 
  • G 
  • H 
  • I 
  • J 
 
30
Paragraph E
  • A 
  • B 
  • C 
  • D 
  • E 
  • F 
  • G 
  • H 
  • I 
  • J 
 
31
Paragraph F
  • A 
  • B 
  • C 
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  • J 
 
32
Paragraph G
  • A 
  • B 
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  • D 
  • E 
  • F 
  • G 
  • H 
  • I 
  • J 

Questions 33 – 35

Questions 33-36

Complete the notes below.
 
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
 
Write your answers in boxes 33-36 on your answer sheet.

Objects age in accordance with principles of 33 , and of 34 

Through mutations, organisms can 35  better to the environment
36 would pose a serious problem for the theory of evolution

Question (38)

Answers

  • 1 Answer: D
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q1:topic, text 

    ANSWER: D

    equipped with an Armory of lasers that they will be pointing towards the heavens to discharge thunderclouds before lightning can strike.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that equipped with an Armory of lasers that they will be pointing towards the heavens to discharge thunderclouds before lightning can strike.so the correct answer is D.

2 Answer: A

  •  Explain
    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q2: Lightning damage costs American

    ANSWER: A

    there is damage to property too. Lightning damage costs American power companies more than $100 million a year.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that there is damage to property too. Lightning damage costs American power companies more than $100 million a year.so the coreect answer is A.

  • 3 Answer: A

     Explain

    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q3:University of Florida, with support

    ANSWER: A

    by the University of Florida, with support from the Electrical Power Research Institute (EPRI), based in California. 

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that by the University of Florida, with support from the Electrical Power Research Institute (EPRI), based in California. so the correct answer is A.

  • 4 Answer: power companies
  •  Explain
    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q4: power companies

    ANSWER:  power companies.

    power companies, is looking at ways to protect the United States’ power grid from lightning strikes

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that power companies, is looking at ways to protect the United States’ power grid from lightning strikes so the correct answer is power companies.

  • 5 Answer: basic requirement 
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q5:  basic requirement 

    ANSWER: safely.

    safely- and safety is a basic requirement since no one wants to put themselves or their expensive equipment at risk

    NOTE:

    In the passage w can see that safely- and safety is a basic requirement since no one wants to put themselves or their expensive equipment at risk. so the correct answer is safely.

  • 6 Answer: Size
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q6: manageable system 

    ANSWER:  size.

    size and says that a laser around the size of a small table is in the offing. He plans to test this more manageable system on live thunderclouds next summer

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that size and says that a laser around the size of a small table is in the offing. He plans to test this more manageable system on live thunderclouds next summer so the correct Answer is size.

  • 7 Answer: /
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q7: create ions.

    ANSWER: B

    atoms and create ions.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that atoms and create ions so the correct answer is atoms.

  • 8 Answer: /
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q8: portable enough

    ANSWER: C

    portable enough to be taken to international sporting events to beam up at brewing storm clouds.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that portable enough to be taken to international sporting events to beam up at brewing storm clouds. so the correct answer is storm clouds.

  • 9 Answer: /
    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q9: 

    ANSWER: G

    rockets trailing wires into thunderclouds to set up an easy discharge path for the huge electric charges that these clouds generate. 

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that rockets trailing wires into thunderclouds to set up an easy discharge path for the huge electric charges that these clouds generate. so the correct answer is rockets. 

  • 10 Answer: /
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q10:

    ANSWER: D

     it would not be pointed straight at the clouds. Instead it would be directed at a mirror, and from there into the sky

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that it would not be pointed straight at the clouds. Instead it would be directed at a mirror, and from there into the sky so the correct answer is mirror.

  • 11 Answer: NO
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q11:  with the $5 million that EPRI

    ANSWER: NO.

    But they have not yet come up with the $5 million that EPRI says will be needed to develop a commercial system,

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that But they have not yet come up with the $5 million that EPRI says will be needed to develop a commercial system,so the correct answer is NO.

12  Obtaining money to improve the lasers will depend on tests in real storms.

  • 12 Answer: YES
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q12: forthcoming field tests 

    ANSWER: YES.

    He reckons that the forthcoming field tests will be the turning point – and he’s hoping for good news. Bernstein predicts ‘an avalanche of interest and support’ if all goes well.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that He reckons that the forthcoming field tests will be the turning point – and he’s hoping for good news. Bernstein predicts ‘an avalanche of interest and support’ if all goes well. so the correct answer is YES.

13  Weather forecasters are intensely interested in Diels’s system.

  • 13 Answer: NOT GIVEN
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q13:

    ANSWER: NOT GIVE.

    NOTE:

    This sentence has not given in the passage so the correct answer is NOT GIVE.

  • 14 Answer: B
  • 15 Answer: C
  • 16 Answer: F
  • 17 Answer: H
  • 18 Answer: J
  • 19 Answer: TRUE
 
29

 Answer: G

  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q29:  result of developments

    ANSWER: vii

    Although more and more people attain an advanced age as a result of developments in medical care and better nutrition, the characteristic upper limit for most remains 80 years.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that Although more and more people attain an advanced age as a result of developments in medical care and better nutrition, the characteristic upper limit for most remains 80 years.so the correct answer is vii.

 30 Answer: A
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q30: genetically determined 

    ANSWER: i

    If a life span is a genetically determined biological characteristic, it is logically necessary to propose the existence of an internal clock

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that If a life span is a genetically determined biological characteristic, it is logically necessary to propose the existence of an internal clock so the correct answer is i.

 31 Answer: H
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q31:  behave ‘frugally’ with energy 

    ANSWER: viii.

    Animals which behave ‘frugally’ with energy become particularly old, for example, crocodiles and tortoises.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that Animals which behave ‘frugally’ with energy become particularly old, for example, crocodiles and tortoises.so the correct answer is viii.

 32 Answer: D
  • KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q32:

    ANSWER: iv.

    It follows from the above that 

    NOTE:
    In the passage we can see that It follows from the above that so the correct answer is so the correct answer is iv.

  • 33 Answer: physical chemistry
    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q33: 

    ANSWER: physical chemistry.

    Ageing in this case must occur according to the laws of physical chemistry and of thermodynamics

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that Ageing in this case must occur according to the laws of physical chemistry and of thermodynamics so the correct answer physical chemistry.

    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q34:

    ANSWER: thermodynamics.

    Ageing in this case must occur according to the laws of physical chemistry and of thermodynamics

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that Ageing in this case must occur according to the laws of physical chemistry and of thermodynamics so the correct answer thermodynamics.

  • 35 Answer: adapt

    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q35:

    ANSWER:  adapt.

     adaptation to the environmental conditions.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that  adaptation to the environmental conditions. so the correct answer is adapt.

  • 36 Answer: immortality

    KEYWORDSEXPLANATION

    Q36: Immortality would disturb this system

    ANSWER:  immortality.

    Immortality would disturb this system – it needs room for new and better life. This is the basic problem of evolution.

    NOTE:

    In the passage we can see that Immortality would disturb this system – it needs room for new and better life. This is the basic problem of evolution. so the correct answer is immortality.

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