全国

取消

首页 > 托福资讯 > 托福阅读 > 正文

托福阅读材料之What’s That in the Sky?

新航道
2013-10-18 17:53:29

 

In his book Cosmos, the late scientist Carl Sagan talks about the way in which the earth is regularly struck by material from outer space. These collisions with space debris can be minor–as in a shooting star on a summer night–or amazingly destructive, as in the collision that probably killed off the dinosaurs. Thankfully, the biggies are extremely rare.

 

Sagan makes the point that the most dangerous collision facing us now, however, is one that might be mistaken for something else: a nuclear attack. He warned that thinking an asteroid is actually an ICBM could result in the worst possible destruction–an unintended war.

 

Was this just paranoid thinking? Unfortunately, no. Carl Sagan is no longer with us, but in testimony before congress just last year, a United States Air Force brigadier general warned that just such a thing almost happened in June of two thousand and two. That’s when a meteoroid entered the earth’s atmosphere over the Mediterranean and was picked up by U.S. early-warning satellites on the lookout for high-altitude explosions and incoming missiles.

 

The alarming object falling from the sky was recognized for what it was, this time. The generals’ point, though, was that we never know where space junk will fall. Turn the globe by just a few hours earlier on that day in June and the meteoroid would have been over the border of Pakistan and India–exactly where everyone was fearing a nuclear attack.

 

We’ve been lucky so far. But Carl Sagan’s warning came perilously close to becoming a prophecy and a harmless natural event in the sky, to triggering a terrible event here on earth.

 
以上就是新航道托福频道为大家整理的托福阅读材料之What’s That in the Sky?,希望对大家有帮助,更多资讯、资料请访问新航道托福阅读频道 http://www.xhd.cn/toefl/yuedu/

上一篇:托福阅读材料之Men Spend More than Women?

下一篇:托福阅读材料之stressful job

相关文章
更多 >
热门课程
更多 >
特惠活动
更多 >