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【单选题】

Forecasting the weather requires huge quantities of data, mainly collected by high-tech means such as satellites and radar, but low-tech tools are important too—especially old-fashioned rain gauges (雨量器).
Each technique has its strengths and weaknesses. Radar and satellites can cover swathes of land, yet they lack detail. Gauges are much more accurate, but the price of that accuracy is spotty coverage. Now, though, Aart Overeem of the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute and his colleagues reckon they have come up with another way to watch the rain carefully. It offers, they believe, both broad coverage and fine detail. Best of all, it relies on something that is already almost everywhere—the mobile-phone network.
Their scheme starts from the observation that rain can make it harder for certain sorts of electromagnetic radiation to travel through the atmosphere. Measure this resistance and you can measure how rainy it is. The researchers do not measure the strength of mobile-phone signals themselves. Instead, they rely on something that mobile networks already do, and measure the strength of the microwave links that base stations use to talk to each other.
The idea itself is not new, and there have been trials in recent years. Like all the best science, the idea is both technically elegant and practically useful, since it allows better cross-checking of existing methods. There are other advantages. Coverage is one. Even in rich countries with well-financed weather forecasters, there are probably far more mobile-phone base stations than rain gauges. That is truer still in poor countries, where rain gauges are scarce and radar often nonexistent, but mobile phones common. Another boon is that network operators tend to keep a close eye on their microwave links. Although the researchers were able to obtain data only every 15 minutes, some firms sample their networks once a minute. That means rainfall could, in principle, be measured almost in real time, something that neither gauges nor radar nor satellites can manage.
The technology is not perfect: snow and hail are harder than rain for microwaves to spot, for example. Besides, mobile networks are densest in areas, which are also the places that probably have weather-forecasting equipment already. Even in the rich, ized Netherlands, coverage outside cities is noticeably irregular. What is true about the idea of using the mobile-phone network to measure rain

A.
It is completely new.
B.
It is a bit impractical.
C.
It is worth a try.
D.
It is easier said than done.
题目标签:雨量器
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【多选题】对新启用的20cm雨量器专用量杯应检查其计量的准确度,方法是()

A.
对0.1~1.0mm的量能否正确读取
B.
对0.1~0.5mm的量能否正确读取
C.
取约10mm的水量,与另一量杯量取的值相差不能超过0.1mm
D.
取约10mm的水量,与另一量杯量取的值相差不能超过0.2mm

【单选题】Forecasting the weather requires huge quantities of data, mainly collected by high-tech means such as satellites and radar, but low-tech tools are important too—especially old-fashioned rain gauges (雨...

A.
how to use the mobile-phone network to measure rainfall
B.
the equipment for measuring rainfall with the mobile-phone network
C.
the limits of using the mobile-phone network to measure rainfall
D.
the efficiency of measuring rainfall with the mobile-phone network

【多选题】20cm雨量器维护要点()

A.
定期检查高度、水平和外筒是否漏水
B.
每次巡视仪器时检查外筒是否漏水
C.
每次巡视仪器时注意清除承水器、储水瓶内的昆虫、尘土、树叶等
D.
承水器的口沿要保持正圆

【单选题】Forecasting the weather requires huge quantities of data, mainly collected by high-tech means such as satellites and radar, but low-tech tools are important too—especially old-fashioned rain gauges (雨...

A.
mobile phones are rarely used in rural areas
B.
weather forecasts are not easy in big cities
C.
some areas can’t be adequately covered
D.
this technology can hardly be used m poor countries