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Help - summary of english text

hooboork

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2008
Messages
44
Hi all,
on Monday I should give my teacher 1/2 page of summary of the following text. My english is disastrous and I should really appreciate if someone from english speaking people should do instead of me. I know that it is cheating, but it is very important for me and tomorow I will have no time. Thank you. Text:

Solid, liquid, gas, and... what? Quick, what´s the fourth state of matter? This should be as easy as naming John, Paul, George, and Ringo. Ninety-nine percent of the universe is made of it. The Earth is surrounded by it. The aurora borealis is a lovely example of it. So is lightning. The sun is made of it.
"Fire!" you guess, and you´re on the right track, at least. The answer is plasma. Perharps an anticlimax? Plasma is a gas in which atoms have been ionized - that is to say, stripped of electrons. Because of that, plasma has magnetic and electric fields that move around rambunctiously and unpredicably, altering their enviroment. As the enviroment changes, so does the plasma - a continuous dance of action and reaction. It´s usually hot, but it can also be cold. "Plasma has a life of it own," says Walter Gekelman, who researches the stuff in an enormous basement laboratory at UCLA.
Ionized gas was the first described in the late 1800s by an Englishman named Sir William Crookes, but no until 1928 did an Americian chemist, Irving Langmuir, name it plasma. Names aside, Gekelman and other scientists are still trying to understand the fundamental reasons why it behaves the way it does.
Maybe that´s why plasma has never the respect that a fullfledged state of matter ought to have. But that´s likely to change, and not just because of plasma screen TV. (Not that a plasma screen isn´t a pretty nice addition to the family room: Its weakly ionized cold plasma eliminates the ponderous cathode-ray-tube technology that makes your TV too big for the shelf you´d like to keep it on.
Plasma could be key to new energy sources. The core of the sun is a plasma denser than lead and so hot - 15 million degrees C - that atomic nuclei fuse together there, releasing a huge amount of energy. Everyone knows that for many decades scientists have tried to replicate the sun´s nuclear fusion feat. They´ve built reactors that use plasmas heated to tremendous temperatures, but so far they haven´t been able to get more energy out than they´ve put in. They need a bigger reactor.
Still, "plasma uses are multiplying like crazy" says Gekelman. The rockets of the future may be powered by thin beams of highly accelerated plasma. Cold plasma is essential to many industrial operations: For example, it´s used to etch the grooves that carry information on the surfaces of computer chips.
Mounir Laroussi, a physicist at Old Dominion University, has developed a sort of pencil that shoots out a small stream of cold plasma. It can sterilize equipment that would normally be damaged by heat. Such a device might even be used to disinfect a flesh wound, killing bacteria by blowing out their cell walls without harming other cells. Plasma makes the fibers in disposable diapers more absorbent and makes ink lettering stick to plastic potato-chip bags.
Laroussi says that when he was in high school he never heard about plasma. But there´s so much of it in the universe, and it has so many potential uses, that there will come a day, he predicts, when everyone knows that it´s the fourth state of matter.


PS: Sorry for spamming ;-)
 

fanwuq

Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2007
Messages
2,831
WCA
2008FANW01
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Apparently you are not good at cheating.
I have so many ideas.
1. use babelfish to translate to your language, summarize, change back to english.
2. look up basic info about plasma and write something random about it.
3. Ask someone in you class and copy theirs.
4. Actually do this yourself, it's not that hard.

I suggest idea 2.
 

Brett

Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2008
Messages
175
Location
Maryland
How are you supposed to summarize it in half a page when it hardly takes up half a page itself?
 

Bryan

Premium Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2007
Messages
1,296
Location
Rochester, MN
WCA
2007LOGA01
If you need to summarize, simply copy the lyrics of "Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice or "Regulators" by Warren G. Most Americans in a certain age range are able to recite the majority of these lyrics even if they are not fans of rap music.
 
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