Since the 1850s researchers have tried to show that variations in seasonal weather are connected in some way with sunspots, the outward sign of an increase in the Sun's activity. However, scientists lacked evidence supporting such a link until the mid-1980s, when van Loon and Labitzke compiled statistical evidence suggesting that a link exists and that it involves winds in the upper atmosphere above the equator which reverse their direction, from east to west or west to east, every twelve to fifteen months. This phenomenon is called the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO), and although meteorologists have known about the QBO since the 1950s, until the 1980s no one recognized a subtle but statistically significant link between the QBO and certain patterns of weather. When the west to east direction of winds in the upper atmosphere coincides with periods of high solar activity that occur approximately every eleven years, winters in the eastern and central United States are very cold.

On this basis, some meteorologists predicted that the winter of 1988-1989 in the United States would be severe. However, the winter was a mild one overall, and the meteorologists' attempt to make the connection between the Sun and weather on the Earth appeared unsuccessful, until Barnston and Livezey proposed a hypothesis explaining why the prediction had failed. They argued that the prediction had not taken into account another important element in the climate: the more or less regular pattern of fluctuations in the temperature of the surface waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean.

Barnston and Livezey noted that when the water temperature is abnormally high-the phenomenon called EI Niño- the chances of cold winter weather over North America increase. The opposite situation, when surface temperatures are well below normal-La Nina-is far less common. In fact, until late 1988 no one had seen the combination of La Nina, westerly winds in the upper atmosphere, and high solar activity. Thus, according to Barnston and Livezey, La Nina canceled out the effect of the other two climatic factors and caused the mild winter of 1988-1989. Although this hypothesis is plausible, much research remains to be done before meteorologists can establish and explain the effects of increased solar activity on seasonal weather changes.



The passage provides information to support which of the following statements about the occurrence of very cold winters in the eastern and central United States?


Such winters are most likely to occur if the winds in the upper atmosphere over the equator blow from the east rather than from the west.

Such winters are most likely to occur if increased activity of the Sun coincides with the appearance of La Nina

Such winters are less likely to occur if increased activity of the Sun coincides with the appearance of EI Niño

Such winters are less likely to occur if there is an increase in the number of sunspots on the surface of the Sun

Such winters are less likely to occur if there is a drop in the temperature of the surface waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean.

考题讲解

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正确答案是 B。这是因为,根据文章的内容,在东部和中部美国发生非常寒冷的冬天最有可能发生,如果太阳的活动量同时伴随着 La Nina 出现。文章中指出,当西风在高层大气层上的方向与大约每 11 年出现一次的高太阳活动量相符时,会导致美国东部和中部发生极端寒冷的冬天。然而,1988-1989 年的冬季总体上是温和的,这是因为太阳活动量及其与西风方向的结合,被 La Nina 所抵消。因此,正确的答案是 B,即如果太阳的活动量同时伴随着 La Nina 的出现,就更有可能发生美国东部和中部非常寒冷的冬天。

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