RC - Specific term Inference

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RC - Specific term Inference

by karthikpandian19 » Sun Jul 08, 2012 1:18 pm
Since the 1960s, the United States has operated two separate operational polar-orbiting meteorological satellite systems. These satellites obtain environmental data that are processed to provide graphical weather images and specialized weather products, and that are the predominant input to numerical weather prediction models-all used by weather forecasters, the military, and the public. Polar satellites also provide data used to monitor environmental phenomena, such as ozone depletion and drought conditions, as well as data sets that are used by researchers for a variety of studies, such as climate monitoring.

Unlike geostationary satellites, which maintain a fixed position above the earth, polar-orbiting satellites constantly circle the earth in an almost north-south orbit, providing global coverage of conditions that affect the weather and climate. Each satellite makes about 14 orbits a day. As the earth rotates beneath it, each satellite views the entire earth's surface twice a day. Today, there are two operational polar-orbiting satellites and two operational defense satellites that are positioned so that they can observe the earth in early morning, mid-morning, and early afternoon polar orbits. Together, they ensure that for any region of the earth, the data provided to users are generally no more than 6 hours old.

Polar satellites gather a broad range of data that are transformed into a variety of products for many different uses. When first received, satellite data are considered raw data. To make them usable, the processing centers format the data so that they are time-sequenced and include earth location and calibration information. After formatting, these data are called raw data records. The centers further process these raw data records into data sets, called sensor data records and temperature data records. These data records are then used to derive weather products called environmental data records (EDR). EDRs range from atmospheric products detailing cloud coverage, temperature, humidity, and ozone distribution; to land surface products showing snow cover, vegetation, and land use; to ocean products depicting sea surface temperatures, sea ice, and wave height; to characterizations of the space environment. Combinations of these data records (raw, sensor, temperature, and environmental data records) are also used to derive more sophisticated products, including outputs from numerical weather models and assessments of climate trends.


Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about "raw data"?


(A) It contains information about temperature, humiditiy, and cloud coverage as they change over time.

(B) It is not yet calibrated with some of the information, including location, that allows it to be usable.

(C) It does not yet contain important visual elements of the earth's surface.

(D) It is collected directly in "data sets" to be used for weather prediction, among other purposes.

(E) It is time-sequenced so that scientists and military operatives can use it to track patterns of movement.
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by eagleeye » Sun Jul 08, 2012 1:45 pm
karthikpandian19 wrote:
Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about "raw data"?
(A) It contains information about temperature, humiditiy, and cloud coverage as they change over time. We know that processed data (EDRs contain this info). Not necessarily raw data. NO.
"EDRs range from atmospheric products detailing cloud coverage, temperature, humidity, and ozone distribution"

(B) It is not yet calibrated with some of the information, including location, that allows it to be usable. This is CORRECT.
"To make them (raw data) usable, the processing centers format the data so that they are time-sequenced and include earth location and calibration information."

(C) It does not yet contain important visual elements of the earth's surface.
Nowhere are we told that it does not yet contain important visual details. NO.

(D) It is collected directly in "data sets" to be used for weather prediction, among other purposes.
Raw data is processed by the processing centers into raw data records which are then used for creating data sets. NO.
"After formatting, these data are called raw data records. The centers further process these raw data records into data sets, "

(E) It is time-sequenced so that scientists and military operatives can use it to track patterns of movement.
It is not time sequenced. Processed data is. NO.
"To make them (raw data) usable, the processing centers format the data so that they are time-sequenced and include earth location and calibration information."

Hence B. :)

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by karthikpandian19 » Sun Jul 08, 2012 6:07 pm
OA is B

B is correct because it is the only statement that can be inferred from the evidence presented in the passage. ("When first received, satellite data are considered raw data. To make them usable, the processing centers format the data so that they are time-sequenced and include earth location and calibration information.") The other answer choices do not follow directly from the evidence in the passage, so they are not logical inferences.
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by jaiswalamrita » Tue Jul 24, 2012 2:18 pm
Should be B only.