Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage.
Keeping time accurately comes with a price. The maximum accuracy of a clock is directly related to how much disorder, or entropy, it creates every time it ticks. Natalia Ares at the University of Oxford and her colleagues made this discovery using a tiny clock with an accuracy that can be controlled. The clock consists of a 50-nanometre-thick membrane of silicon nitride, vibrated by an electric current. Each time the membrane moved up and down once and then returned to its original position, the researchers counted a tick, and the regularity of the spacing between the ticks represented the accuracy of the clock. The researchers found that as they increased the clock's accuracy, the heat produced in the system grew, increasing the entropy of its surroundings by jostling nearby particles . . . "If a clock is more accurate, you are paying for it somehow," says Ares. In this case, you pay for it by pouring more ordered energy into the clock, which is then converted into entropy. "By measuring time, we are increasing the entropy of the universe," says Ares. The more entropy there is in the universe, the closer it may be to its eventual demise. "Maybe we should stop measuring time," says Ares. The scale of the additional entropy is so small, though, that there is no need to worry about its effects, she says.
The increase in entropy in timekeeping may be related to the "arrow of time", says Marcus Huber at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna, who was part of the research team. It has been suggested that the reason that time only flows forward, not in reverse, is that the total amount of entropy in the universe is constantly increasing, creating disorder that cannot be put in order again.
The relationship that the researchers found is a limit on the accuracy of a clock, so it doesn't mean that a clock that creates the most possible entropy would be maximally accurate - hence a large, inefficient grandfather clock isn't more precise than an atomic clock. "It's a bit like fuel use in a car. Just because I'm using more fuel doesn't mean that I'm going faster or further," says Huber.
When the researchers compared their results with theoretical models developed for clocks that rely on quantum effects, they were surprised to find that the relationship between accuracy and entropy seemed to be the same for both. . . . We can't be sure yet that these results are actually universal, though, because there are many types of clocks for which the relationship between accuracy and entropy haven't been tested. "It's still unclear how this principle plays out in real devices such as atomic clocks, which push the ultimate quantum limits of accuracy," says Mark Mitchison at Trinity College Dublin in Ireland. Understanding this relationship could be helpful for designing clocks in the future, particularly those used in quantum computers and other devices where both accuracy and temperature are crucial, says Ares. This finding could also help us understand more generally how the quantum world and the classical world are similar and different in terms of thermodynamics and the passage of time.
Question for CAT 2021 Reading Comprehension Questions - 10
Try yourself:Which one of the following sets of words and phrases serves best as keywords of the passage?
Explanation
The passage primarily focuses on the relationship between measuring time, the accuracy of clocks, and the resulting increase in entropy. These three concepts are central to the discussion, as highlighted by Natalia Ares' findings, the connection to the "arrow of time," and the thermodynamic implications. While other options include relevant terms, they are either too specific (e.g., "Silicon Nitride," "Membrane") or miss the core focus (e.g., "Electric current" is a detail of the clock’s mechanism, not a main theme).
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Question for CAT 2021 Reading Comprehension Questions - 10
Try yourself:The author makes all of the following arguments in the passage, EXCEPT that:
Explanation
The correct answer is:
b) There is no difference in accuracy between an inefficient grandfather clock and an atomic clock.
This statement is incorrect because the passage clearly explains that while both clocks may produce entropy, a large, inefficient grandfather clock is not more accurate than an atomic clock. It uses the analogy of fuel use in a car to illustrate that more entropy doesn't equate to higher accuracy.
Explanation of other options:
a) The relationship between accuracy and entropy may not apply to all clocks.
This is true, as the passage states that the relationship between accuracy and entropy hasn't been tested for all types of clocks.
c) Researchers found that the heat produced in a system is the price paid for increased accuracy of measurement.
This is true, as the passage mentions that increasing accuracy leads to increased heat, thus increasing entropy.
d) In designing clocks for quantum computers, both precision and heat have to be taken into account.
This is true, as the passage notes that understanding this relationship is important for designing future clocks, particularly for use in quantum computers where both accuracy and temperature are crucial.
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Question for CAT 2021 Reading Comprehension Questions - 10
Try yourself:None of the following statements can be inferred from the passage EXCEPT that:
Explanation
The passage directly states, "The clock consists of a 50-nanometre-thick membrane of silicon nitride, vibrated by an electric current," confirming that option d can be inferred, as the vibration is driven by the current, implying the current is produced in the system to cause the vibration. The other options cannot be inferred:
a: The passage links entropy and the arrow of time but doesn’t say the arrow of time hasn’t been tested for atomic clocks.
b: The passage mentions clocks in quantum computers but doesn’t claim quantum computers themselves produce more heat or entropy.
c: The passage compares accuracy but doesn’t explicitly state grandfather clocks produce less heat or entropy.
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Question for CAT 2021 Reading Comprehension Questions - 10
Try yourself:"It's a bit like fuel use in a car. Just because I'm using more fuel doesn't mean that I'm going faster or further . . ." What is the purpose of this example?
Explanation
The quote from Marcus Huber, "Just because I'm using more fuel doesn't mean that I'm going faster or further," is used to clarify that a clock producing more entropy (analogous to using more fuel) doesn’t necessarily mean it’s more accurate (analogous to going faster or further). The passage states, "a large, inefficient grandfather clock isn't more precise than an atomic clock," supporting this idea. Option a correctly captures this analogy, explaining that while greater accuracy may increase entropy, the reverse—more entropy leading to greater accuracy—is not necessarily true. Other options misalign with the passage’s focus or introduce unrelated ideas (e.g., measuring speed with clocks in option c).