Owi Bre l03 U06 Ak Workbook
Owi Bre l03 U06 Ak Workbook
Owi Bre l03 U06 Ak Workbook
New Frontiers
1 Complete the sentences. Then fill in the crossword.
V A L L E Y
1
P R O O
2
F
3
A
L U S 4
A
A 5
I N S T R U M E N T S
I D P
N A 6
D E G R E E S
S 7
A T M O S P H E R E C
E T
8
L A N D S C A P E S
9
D T
U A
S A T E
10
L L I T E S
T
Down
1. The desert seems to have no end. It’s so vast .
2. Many cereal crops are grown on plains because they are flat.
3. Water and oxygen are fundamental to life.
4. Life and water are aspects that fascinate scientists.
9. After the dust storm, they had to clean their roofs and windows.
Across
1. The river ran along the valley between the mountains.
2. There is now proof that water really does exist on Mars.
5. Instruments are tools or devices that help scientists do their work.
6. Temperatures reach 70 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer on Mars.
7. Earth is surrounded by an atmosphere made up of different gases.
8. The moon’s landscape is full of craters.
10. Satellites orbit the Earth and send back information.
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3
7 Listen to the information. Answer the questions. 026
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If there were life on Mars, we would know If it had been less hazy, we would have seen
about it by now. the eclipse.
If we visited Mars, we would find some Rovers might have landed on Mars sooner if
aspects similar to those on Earth. space exploration had received more money.
We use if + past simple, would/could/might + infinitive (without to) to talk about events and
situations that are unlikely to happen in the present or future. After I, he, she or it, use were: If I
were an astronaut, I would travel to the International Space Station.
We use if + past perfect, would/could/might have + past participle to talk about impossible or
hypothetical events and situations in the past.
The if-clause can come first or second in the sentence. When it comes second, no comma is
needed: I would travel to Mars if it were possible.
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astronomy geysers habitable hazy satellite seasonal dust
3. The mission control centre would have rescued (rescue) the scientist if they
had had (have) a satellite ready to put
into space.
5. If a dust storm had suddenly hit my town, I would have closed all the windows .
6. If my car had been equipped with the technology to travel into the past,
Driving on Mars
A high-tech rover with a vast, red, rocky landscape in the background is now a
familiar image. Curiosity is the latest rover on Mars. It cost over US$2 billion to build
and it is equipped with highly advanced instruments. This technology and the actual
voyage to Mars are already incredible. But have you ever wondered how you actually
drive a rover on a planet several million miles away?
Well, a sequence of things needs to happen during the Martian night, while the
rover is ‘asleep’. A team of about 200 scientists on Earth analyses information that the
rover sends back. They discuss what needs to be done next and which instruments will
be used. The work is complicated because the scientists need to calculate how much
power each instrument will use. Because there are so many instruments, this takes
time.
The team writes thousands of lines of computer code to instruct the rover. They
map out the best, smoothest route to the next destination. They include where the
rover will stop to take pictures or operate an instrument.
Fortunately, the scientists’ laboratory has an outside area called the Mars Yard. It’s
full of sand, dust and rocks of different sizes. Engineers use this area to test software
and movements on two Curiosity models and solve any problems they may have.
Every day, a signal is sent to ‘wake up’ the rover and upload its instructions. This is
also complex. The Mars day is 40 minutes longer than an Earth day, which means the
working day and the time when the information is sent are continually changing.
Distance is another challenge. Signals between Earth and Mars have to cross up
to 250 million miles (401 million kilometres) of space. What is more, the signal isn’t
direct. It has to go through communication satellites, which takes time.
There’s a lot of pressure to get things
right on Mars, but the one easy thing about
driving on an empty planet is that you
don’t have any traffic coming from the
other direction!
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4. Scientists have b .
a. a virtual landscape to practise b. a physical space to practise
the rover’s movements the rover’s movements
5. An Earth day is b .
a. longer than a day on Mars b. shorter than a day on Mars
3 Use the organiser below to complete the sequence of how instructions are given
to the rover. Possible answers
scientists scientists
scientists
computer scientists
movements instructions the rover
analyse analyze
analyze
codes are andanalyze
software are sent wakes up
data and data
data
written
and
and are
data
tested
and through and follows
have meetings have
have meetings
meetings have meetings satellites instructions
4 Write. If you were one of the scientists, what would be the greatest challenge for you?
Give your reasons.
Possible answers: The greatest challenge would be the planning because there are
so many scientists to work and co-ordinate with. / The greatest challenge is time
and distance. I would need to be patient because Mars is very far away and all the
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The instruments detected water accurately. Curiosity has travelled far on the plains of
the red planet.
The instruments detected water more The rover Endeavor has travelled further
accurately than before. than Curiosity.
The instruments on Curiosity detected water the Endeavor has travelled the furthest of all
most accurately. rovers so far.
With comparative adverbs, use more ... than; with superlative adverbs, use the most. With
adverbs that have the same form as the adjectives, use -er and -est: fast, faster, fastest; hard,
harder, hardest; near, nearer, nearest.
There are some irregular forms: well, better, best; badly, worse, worst; far, further, furthest.
1 Listen to each pair of sentences. Then make changes to the adjective to complete each
sentence with the correct use of the adverb. 029
1. Astronauts eat more healthily than I do. (healthy)
4. Voyager 1 and 2 have travelled the furthest in the solar system. (far)
5. The rovers Spirit and Curiosity found water more quickly than scientists
expected. (quick)
2 Write. Use adverbs to describe how you do things compared to your friends or other
members of your family. Answers will vary.
When I go cycling with friends, I can go the fastest.
I normally sleep the longest in my family. / I eat more quickly than my brother.
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1. What took the best pictures of Pluto, the Hubble Space Telescope or New Horizons?
New Horizons
2. How does the speed of New Horizons compare with other spacecraft?
4. How did a team of scientists on Earth make sure the probe could make good observations
as it flew by Pluto?
They produced the most accurately planned sequence of instructions.
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1 Organise.
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1. Your task is to write about the argument that it’s better to explore the ocean than outer
space. To persuade your readers, research facts to support your argument.
Argument
Counter-argument
2. In your first paragraph, introduce the two arguments you’re going to discuss. Write a
topic sentence to lead your reader into your essay. Write your topic sentence here.
You’ll need at least two paragraphs. In each, present the argument and then your counter-
argument.
The last line of your essay should make it clear which argument you support.
2 Write.
1. Go to page 105 in your book. Re-read the model and writing prompt.
2. Write your first draft. Check for organisation, content, punctuation, capitalisation
and spelling.
3. Write your final draft. Share it with your teacher and classmates.
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• use present and past conditionals to talk about unlikely (but possible) o Yes, I can!
or impossible situations. o I think I can.
o I need more practice.
1. Write a conditional sentence about something that is unlikely to happen in the present.
I would have travelled to Mars if there had been a tourist space bus.
2. New Horizons has taken the most amazingly (amazingly) detailed photos of Pluto.
• write a persuasive essay about space and ocean exploration. o Yes, I can!
o I think I can.
Present a counter-argument for each statement. o I need more practice.
Space exploration is important because we can learn a lot about the universe.
Discovering what is on new planets is very exciting, but sending space probes is
extremely expensive and takes years to prepare.
The day when we can all have our own jet packs to ascend and
(1) descend wherever we want may be closer than
we think.
So it may still be some time before our airways are full of (5) soaring jet
packs. It’s predicted that the first public use of jet packs will be at special
(6) flight ‘clubs’ where people can rent them and be taught how to use
them by (7) skilled trainers.
Businesses will probably be the first to use jet packs commercially, possibly for flying
to meetings or delivering products. Jet packs could also (8) allow people
who work in emergency services, including paramedics and firefighters, to travel across
cities and provide help and (9) support quickly.
1. In 2015, we discovered that our solar system is full of dust / not such a cold, dark place.
3. For 85 years, we only had a hazy picture of Pluto / an artist’s impression of Pluto.
5. Thanks to a lander’s solar panels, we saw the planet Neptune / aspects of a comet.
6. Scientists now have proof that there was once a vast ancient ocean / life on Mars.
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1. Voyager 1 and 2 did not get as close to Pluto as New Horizons. (travel/furthest/space)
They had travelled the furthest in space.
2. Bats learnt to fly 55 million years ago. (insects/fly/for millions of years before that)
Insects had been flying for millions of years before that.
4
7 Read. Use forms of the words in brackets to complete the sentences.
2. We wouldn’t have seen (not, see) photos of Pluto if the space mission
had failed (fail).
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