时间:2018-12-08 作者:英语课 分类:2018年NPR美国国家公共电台11月


英语课

 


MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:


NASA's plucky 1 rover known as Opportunity has been on Mars nearly 15 years - a tad longer than the 90 days it was designed for. It has taken thousands of images. It has helped scientists better understand the red planet. But NASA hasn't heard from Opportunity since June. NPR's Joe Palca recently visited the rover's control room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. Engineers there are still hoping to make contact with the rover.


JOE PALCA, BYLINE 2: In a building near the cafeteria, there's a large, dimly lit room filled with computer consoles. On the walls, large flat panel displays show readouts from various spacecraft.


ASHTON VAUGHS: This is the console where we send our commands to the Opportunity rover.


PALCA: That's Ashton Vaughs.


VAUGHS: I'm one of the Aces 3.


PALCA: The Aces are the ones who actually hit the button to send a command to the rover.


VAUGHS: What we have been sending for the last several weeks are commands to ask the rover to send us a tone, let us know it's there.


PALCA: Pinging the rover is a new tactic 4. NASA lost contact with the rover in June when a dust storm prevented the rover's solar panels from generating power. In such a circumstance, the rover would have put itself to sleep. The dust storm is long over so it should wake up and send a message back to Earth, but it hasn't. Engineers think it may be waking up and then going back to sleep before it can transmit. So Vaughs says they're sending it commands hoping to catch it before it nods off. It takes about six minutes for a radio signal to travel to Mars then another six minutes to come back.


VAUGHS: Around 12 minutes from the time we've sent the command is when we would expect to hear back from the rover.


PALCA: Let's say it wakes up tonight. Are you going to be the first person to know that?


VAUGHS: Yes.


BILL NELSON: He would be the first person in the world to know that we've heard from Opportunity.


PALCA: Bill Nelson is engineering manager for the rover.


NELSON: We trust that he would share that information rapidly.


PALCA: Nelson has been with the rover team since before the rover landed on Mars.


NELSON: I have to admit I'm beginning to be a little bit worried. I thought, you know, about now is when I would've expected to hear from the vehicle.


PALCA: Nelson says even though the skies are clear, the solar arrays may be covered with too much dust from the storm to work properly. He says this is a time of year when the winds kick up on Mars so he's hoping they'll blow the dust away. That's happened before. But not hearing anything is unsettling. Abigail Fraeman is deputy project scientist.


ABIGAIL FRAEMAN: Right now we're kind of in this state of limbo 5 - OK, what's going to happen next? And we don't know.


PALCA: Like Nelson, Fraeman has a long history with the rover. In 2004, when she was 16, she was in a JPL control room when Opportunity landed. She was there as part of an outreach program, called, Red Rover Goes to Mars, run by the Planetary Society. She says even if the rover is never heard from again, it's important to remember it was only expected to last 90 days.


FRAEMAN: It's accomplished 6 so much more than we even could've imagined. I mean, the fact that I was able to be in the room when it landed when I was in high school, and now I'm - I got my Ph.D., I'm at JPL and I'm the deputy project scientist, just tells you how long this has been running and how much has happened. And so it's sad, but it's not terribly sad. It's terribly happy how wonderful the mission has been.


PALCA: The team working on Opportunity is treating the rover's silence as an opportunity. Ashley Stroupe is a rover driver. I met her in what was historically known as the Mars sandbox, a hangar-like room where there are replicas 7 of the rover that can be used for testing. Stroupe says she's been trying out new software for the rover here.


ASHLEY STROUPE: We're at least taking advantage of the downtime to try to finish all that up so that when - we'll will say when - Opportunity talks to us again, we'll be ready to go.


PALCA: I guess we can call that Opportunity optimism. Joe Palca, NPR News, Pasadena.



1 plucky
adj.勇敢的
  • The plucky schoolgirl amazed doctors by hanging on to life for nearly two months.这名勇敢的女生坚持不放弃生命近两个月的精神令医生感到震惊。
  • This story featured a plucky heroine.这个故事描述了一个勇敢的女英雄。
2 byline
n.署名;v.署名
  • His byline was absent as well.他的署名也不见了。
  • We wish to thank the author of this article which carries no byline.我们要感谢这篇文章的那位没有署名的作者。
3 aces
abbr.adjustable convertible-rate equity security (units) 可调节的股本证券兑换率;aircraft ejection seat 飞机弹射座椅;automatic control evaluation simulator 自动控制评估模拟器n.擅长…的人( ace的名词复数 );精于…的人;( 网球 )(对手接不到发球的)发球得分;爱司球
  • The local representative of ACES will define the local area. ACES的当地代表将划定当地的范围。 来自互联网
  • Any medical expenses not covered by ACES insurance are the sole responsibility of the parents. 任何ACES保险未包括的医疗费用一律是父母的责任。 来自互联网
4 tactic
n.战略,策略;adj.战术的,有策略的
  • Reducing prices is a common sales tactic.降价是常用的销售策略。
  • She had often used the tactic of threatening to resign.她惯用以辞职相威胁的手法。
5 limbo
n.地狱的边缘;监狱
  • His life seemed stuck in limbo and he could not go forward and he could not go back.他的生活好像陷入了不知所措的境地,进退两难。
  • I didn't know whether my family was alive or dead.I felt as if I was in limbo.我不知道家人是生是死,感觉自己茫然无措。
6 accomplished
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的
  • Thanks to your help,we accomplished the task ahead of schedule.亏得你们帮忙,我们才提前完成了任务。
  • Removal of excess heat is accomplished by means of a radiator.通过散热器完成多余热量的排出。
7 replicas
n.复制品( replica的名词复数 )
  • His hobby is building replicas of cars. 他的爱好是制作汽车的复制品。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • The replicas are made by using a thin film of fusible alloy on a stiffening platen. 复制是用附着在加强托板上的可熔合金薄膜实现的。 来自辞典例句
学英语单词
385
acknowledgment request
air-water system
anconitis
annular coil
Arany's number
artificial draught
as often as
at the stroke of a pen
auxiliary operation
azo imide
biccy
bigsby
burst synchronization
byrlaws
calorific value gross
capital of Cuba
chopping primary mirror
clerodendron pumilum spr.
co2 extinguishing system of hydrogenerator
Cochabamba
command telephone
company image
compiler test
computer-use
consanguini
Copper-Fixed
dacoity
Dale Fort
delie
deposition process
Diadophis
dielectric conductance
double-double iron
drug-induced jaundice
edge-contact-cooled rectifier
edicard
effective exhaust velocity
electro-plated pottery
electronic medical records
electronic scanning
endothermic substance
enzootic bovine leukosis
export cartels
fixed disk storage
flash-o-lens
flubdub and gulf
fuzzy measure space
generalized relation
gingern
government statistics
gross national products deflator
gum accroidess
hydraulic capstan
ichthium
Impatiens henanensis
impending prosecution
imperfect vacuum
intubation well
lancashire saw
main coolant
mandrillus leucophaeuss
motor nerves
natwhale
nemaphyllite
nervous stimulant poisoning
news flow
non-rational money wage demand
noodling
office dealing with inward goods traffic
ornated
outsurvived
peip
polyfluorocarbon
prairie gentian
price cheating
pseudoicterus
psychiartric
put in back
quarantunable disease
responsibility system of hospital president
rhododendron pulchrum sweet
Santesson's anemia
Saussurea hieracioides
scribbling paper
self-activated switch
Shādadkot
simulated sonic log
ST_good-and-bad_serious-and-unpleasant
stall propagation
straightening of kinked rail
surbase
the elderly
the gift of the gab
thermonegative reaction
thripps
tie into knots
torsional-vibration
Tourouvre
tschangbaischanitine
tumo(u)r diagnostics
vmebuss