HIGH SPEED PHOTOGRAPHY - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From IELTS Recent Actual Test 3 Academic Reading Test 5 · Part 3 · Questions 27–40
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
HIGH SPEED PHOTOGRAPHY
A Photography gained the interest of many scientists and artists from its inception. Scientists have used photography to record and study movements, such as Eadweard Muybridge's study of human and animal locomotion in 1887. Artists are equally interested by these aspects but also try to explore avenues other than the photo-mechanical representation of reality, such as the pictorialist movement. Military, police, and security forces use photography for surveillance, recognition and data storage. Photography is used by amateurs to preserve memories, to capture special moments, to tell stories, to send messages, and as a source of entertainment. Various technological improvements and techniques have even allowed for visualising events that are too fast or too slow for the human eye.
B One of such techniques is called fast motion or professionally known as time-lapse. Time-lapse photography is the perfect technique for capturing events and movements in the natural world that occur over a timescale too slow for human perception to follow. The life cycle of a mushroom, for example, is incredibly subtle to the human eye. To present its growth in front of audiences, the principle applied is a simple one: a series of photographs are taken and used in sequence to make a moving-image film, but since each frame is taken with a lapse at a time interval between each shot, when played back at normal speed, a continuous action is produced and it appears to speed up. Put simply: we are shrinking time. Objects and events that would normally take several minutes, days or even months can be viewed to completion in seconds having been sped up by factors of tens to millions.
C Another commonly used technique is high-speed photography, the science of taking pictures of very fast phenomena. High-speed photography can be considered to be the opposite of time-lapse photography. One of the many applications is found in biology studies to study birds, bats and even spider silk. Imagine a hummingbird hovering almost completely still in the air, feeding on nectar. With every flap, its wings bend, flex and change shape. These subtle movements precisely control the lift its wings generate, making it an excellent hoverer. But a hummingbird flaps its wings up to 80 times every second. The only way to truly capture this motion is with cameras that will, in effect, slow down time. To do this, a greater length of film is taken at a high sampling frequency or frame rate, which is much faster than it will be projected on screen. When replayed at normal speed, time appears to be slowed down proportionately. That is why high-speed cameras have become such a mainstay of biology.
D In common usage, high-speed photography can also refer to the use of high-speed cameras that the photograph itself may be taken in a way as to appear to freeze the motion, especially to reduce motion blur. It requires a sensor with good sensitivity and either a very good shuttering system or a very fast strobe light. The recent National Geographic footage—captured last summer during an intensive three-day shoot at the Cincinnati Zoo—is unprecedented in its clarity and detail. "I've watched cheetahs run for 30 years," said Cathryn Hilker, founder of the zoo's Cat Ambassador Program. "But I saw things in that super slow-motion video that I've never seen before." The slow-motion video is entrancing. Every part of the sprinting cat's anatomy—supple limbs, rippling muscles, hyperflexible spine—works together in a symphony of speed, revealing the fluid grace of the world's fastest land animal.
E But things can't get any more complicated in the case of filming a frog catching its prey. Frogs can snatch up prey in a few thousandths of a second—striking out with elastic tongues. Biologists would love to see how a frog's tongue roll out, adhere to prey, and roll back into the frog's mouth. But this all happened too fast, 50 times faster than an eye blink. So naturally people thought of using high-speed camera to capture this fantastic movement in slow motion. Yet one problem still remains—viewers would be bored if they watch the frog swim in slow motion for too long. So how to skip this? The solution is a simple one—adjust the playback speed, which is also called by some the film speed adjustment. The film will originally be shot at a high frame (often 300 frames per second, because it can be converted to much lower frame rates without major issues), but at later editing stage this high frame rate will only be preserved for the prey catching part, while the swimming part will be converted to the normal speed at 24 frames per second. Voila, the scientists can now sit back and enjoy watching without having to go through the pain of waiting.
F Sometimes taking a good picture or shooting a good film is not all about technology, but patience, like in the case of bat. Bats are small, dark-colored; they fly fast and are active only at night. To capture bats on film, one must use some type of camera-tripping device. Photographers or film-makers often place camera near the bat cave, on the path of the flying bats. The camera must be hard-wired with a tripping device so that every time a bat breaks the tripping beam the camera fires and it will keep doing so through the night until the camera's battery runs out. Though highly-advanced tripping device can now allow for unmanned shooting, it still may take several nights to get a truly high quality film.
G Is it science? Is it art? Since the technique was first pioneered around two hundred years ago, photography has developed to a state where it is almost unrecognisable. Some people would even say the future of photography will be nothing like how we imagine it. No matter what future it may hold, photography will continue to develop as it has been repeatedly demonstrated in many aspects of our life that "a picture is worth a thousand words."
Questions
Questions 27–30 Matching Features
Look at the following organisms (Questions 27-30) and the list of features below.
Match each organism with the correct feature, A-D.
Write the correct letter, A-D, in boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet.
A. too fast to be perceived
B. film at the place where the animal will pass
C. too slow to be visible to human eyes
D. adjust the filming speed to make it interesting
Questions 31–35 Summary Completion
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Fast motion (professionally known as time-lapse photography) and slow motion (or high-speed photography) are two commonest techniques of photography. To present before audiences something that occurs naturally slow, photographers take each picture at a 31 before another picture. When these pictures are finally shown on screen in sequence at a normal motion picture rate, audiences see a 32 that is faster than what it naturally is. This technique can make audiences feel as if 33 is shrunk. On the other hand, to demonstrate how fast things move, the movement is exposed on a 34 of film, and then projected on screen at normal playback speed. This makes viewers feel time is 35.
Questions 36–40 Matching Information
Reading Passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet.
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q27 | C | Time-lapse photography is the perfect technique for capturing events and movements in the natural world that occur over a timescale too slow for human perception to follow. The life cycle of a mushroom, for example, is incredibly subtle to the human eye | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that time-lapse photography is a great way to record things in nature that happen too slowly for people to notice. It then gives the mushroom's life cycle as an example, explaining that its growth is very difficult for our eyes to see. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the mushroom grows so slowly that our eyes cannot see the movement. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C because the passage explains that a technique called time-lapse photography is used for events that happen "too slow for human perception to follow". The passage then gives the mushroom as a specific example, saying its growth is "incredibly subtle to the human eye," which means it's very hard for people to see it happening with their own eyes. |
| Q28 | A | But a hummingbird flaps its wings up to 80 times every second. The only way to truly capture this motion is with cameras that will, in effect, slow down time | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that a hummingbird moves its wings 80 times in just one second. This is so quick that we must use special cameras that can make time seem slower to be able to see the movement. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the way a hummingbird moves is so quick that our eyes cannot see it clearly. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because the passage explains that a hummingbird's wings move incredibly fast. It states that a hummingbird 'flaps its wings up to 80 times every second'. This movement is so fast that it is impossible for the human eye to see, which matches the description 'too fast to be perceived'. The text says that the only way to see this motion is by using special high-speed cameras to slow it down. |
| Q29 | D | Yet one problem still remains—viewers would be bored if they watch the frog swim in slow motion for too long. So how to skip this? The solution is a simple one—adjust the playback speed, which is also called by some the film speed adjustment. The film will originally be shot at a high frame (often 300 frames per second, because it can be converted to much lower frame rates without major issues), but at later editing stage this high frame rate will only be preserved for the prey catching part, while the swimming part will be converted to the normal speed at 24 frames per second | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that people watching a film of a frog would get bored if the whole film was in slow motion. The solution is to change the speed. The movie is filmed very fast, but when it is edited, only the part where the frog catches its food is shown in slow motion. The part where the frog is swimming is shown at a normal speed so people don't have to wait. Answer Explanation: The answer means that to make the movie about the frog interesting, the speed of the film is changed. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is D because the passage explains that when filming a frog, scientists face a problem. While the frog catching its food is very fast and needs to be slowed down, watching the frog swim in slow motion for a long time would be 'bored'. To solve this and make the film interesting for viewers, the passage says the solution is to 'adjust the playback speed'. The slow swimming part is shown at normal speed, and only the fast action of catching prey is shown in slow motion. |
| Q30 | B | Photographers or film-makers often place camera near the bat cave, on the path of the flying bats | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that people who want to film bats put their camera near a bat cave, along the 'path' where the bats will fly. A 'path' is a way or route that someone or something moves along. Answer Explanation: The answer is B. This means that to take a picture or video of a bat, people put the camera in a place where they know the bat will fly by. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B because the passage explains a specific method for filming bats. It states that because bats are small, dark, and fast, photographers have to set up their equipment in a specific location. They place the camera on the route the bats are expected to take. This matches the description 'film at the place where the animal will pass'. The keyword from the passage is 'path', which means the way or route an animal travels. |
| Q31 | lapse / time interval | a series of photographs are taken and used in sequence to make a moving-image film, but since each frame is taken with a lapse at a time interval between each shot, when played back at normal speed, a continuous action is produced and it appears to speed up | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that for time-lapse photography, many pictures are taken one after another, but there is a pause, which is called a 'lapse' or 'time interval', between each picture taken. Answer Explanation: The answer means there is a period of time, or a pause, between taking one picture and the next one. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is found in the paragraph describing time-lapse photography. The summary asks how photographers take pictures for this technique. The passage explains that photographers take many pictures, but there is a 'lapse' or a 'time interval' between each photo they take. This is how they capture things that happen very slowly. |
| Q32 | continuous action | a series of photographs are taken and used in sequence to make a moving-image film, but since each frame is taken with a lapse at a time interval between each shot, when played back at normal speed, a continuous action is produced and it appears to speed up | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that in time-lapse photography, many photos are taken with a pause between each one. When these photos are played back at a normal speed, it creates a moving picture that does not stop, and this makes the action look faster. Answer Explanation: The answer means a movement or activity that happens without stopping. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'continuous action' because the passage explains how time-lapse photography works. It says that many pictures are taken one after another with a time gap between them. When these pictures are played at normal speed, they create a 'continuous action' that looks like it is speeding up. The summary asks what audiences see, and the passage states that 'a continuous action is produced'. |
| Q33 | time | Put simply: we are shrinking time | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says, 'Put simply: we are shrinking time.' This means that this type of photography makes events that take a long time to happen, like days or months, look like they are happening in just a few seconds. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'time'. This means the photography technique makes it seem like a long period of time is made much shorter. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'time' because the passage describes time-lapse photography, which is used for events that happen very slowly. The passage explicitly says this technique is 'shrinking time', which means making a long process appear to happen very fast. |
| Q34 | greater length | To do this, a greater length of film is taken at a high sampling frequency or frame rate, which is much faster than it will be projected on screen | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that to make a video look like it is in slow motion, a longer piece of film is used. This allows the camera to take many pictures (frames) very quickly. Answer Explanation: The answer 'greater length' means a longer piece of film is used. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is found in the section explaining high-speed photography. The summary asks how fast movements are filmed to make time seem slower. The passage states that to achieve this effect, which is described as slowing down time, 'a greater length of film' is used to capture frames much faster than they will be shown. |
| Q35 | slowed down proportionately | When replayed at normal speed, time appears to be slowed down proportionately | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that when a video recorded very quickly is shown at a normal speed, it makes it look like time is moving slower. Answer Explanation: The answer means that time looks like it is moving much slower in the video, in a way that matches how fast it was filmed. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'slowed down proportionately' because the passage explains the effect of high-speed photography. This type of photography films things very fast and then plays the film back at a normal speed. The passage directly states that when this is done, 'time appears to be slowed down proportionately', which is what the summary asks for. |
| Q36 | A | Scientists have used photography to record and study movements, such as Eadweard Muybridge's study of human and animal locomotion in 1887. Artists are equally interested by these aspects but also try to explore avenues other than the photo-mechanical representation of reality, such as the pictorialist movement. Military, police, and security forces use photography for surveillance, recognition and data storage. Photography is used by amateurs to preserve memories, to capture special moments, to tell stories, to send messages, and as a source of entertainment | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that different people use photography for different purposes. Scientists use it for studying, artists use it for art, police use it for safety and security work, and normal people use it to save memories and have fun. This shows that photography has many uses in various fields. Answer Explanation: The answer is A. This means that paragraph A describes how photography is used in many different areas or fields. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because this paragraph gives a list of different groups that use photography and what they use it for. It mentions scientists, artists, military, police, and amateurs (regular people). The question asks for a description of photography's 'application in various fields', and the paragraph provides exactly that by showing its use in science, art, security, and personal life. |
| Q37 | C | When replayed at normal speed, time appears to be slowed down proportionately. That is why high-speed cameras have become such a mainstay of biology | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that when a movie made with a high-speed camera is watched at normal speed, everything looks much slower. The passage then says this is the reason ('That is why') these cameras are such an important and regularly used tool ('a mainstay') in biology. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'C'. This means paragraph C has information about why high-speed photography is very important in the study of biology. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'C' because this paragraph explains that some movements in nature, like a hummingbird's wings, are too fast for people to see clearly. High-speed photography allows scientists to record these very fast actions and then watch them in slow motion. This helps them to 'study' the movements in detail. The paragraph ends by directly stating that this ability to slow down time is why the cameras are a 'mainstay,' or a very important tool, in biology. |
| Q38 | G | No matter what future it may hold, photography will continue to develop as it has been repeatedly demonstrated in many aspects of our life that "a picture is worth a thousand words." | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that we do not know what photography will be like in the future, but it will keep getting better. This is because people have shown many times that 'a picture is worth a thousand words,' meaning one picture can tell a story or give more information than many words. Answer Explanation: The answer is G. This means the information about a famous old saying, which shows that photography has a good future, is in paragraph G. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is G because the question asks for a paragraph with a 'traditional wisdom' (a well-known, old saying) that shows photography has good 'prospects' (a good future). Paragraph G ends with the famous saying, 'a picture is worth a thousand words'. The passage uses this saying to explain why photography will 'continue to develop', promising a strong future for it. |
| Q39 | E | The solution is a simple one—adjust the playback speed, which is also called by some the film speed adjustment. The film will originally be shot at a high frame (often 300 frames per second, because it can be converted to much lower frame rates without major issues), but at later editing stage this high frame rate will only be preserved for the prey catching part, while the swimming part will be converted to the normal speed at 24 frames per second | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that to make the film better, the speed of the movie is changed. This happens in the 'editing stage' after filming. The interesting part, where the frog catches its food, is kept in slow motion. The boring part, where the frog is just swimming, is changed to a normal speed. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the paragraph that talks about changing a movie before it is finished is paragraph E. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is E because this paragraph explains how a film is changed or edited after it has been filmed. The question asks about how a film is 'processed before final release'. Paragraph E describes a problem with filming a frog: watching the whole video in slow motion is boring. The solution is to edit the film. It says that the part where the frog catches its food is kept in slow motion, but the part where it is just swimming is changed to normal speed. This process of changing the film after shooting it is called 'editing' or 'processing'. |
| Q40 | F | Though highly-advanced tripping device can now allow for unmanned shooting, it still may take several nights to get a truly high quality film | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that a special tool, called a 'tripping device', makes 'unmanned shooting' possible. 'Unmanned' means that no person is controlling the camera; it works by itself. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'F'. This means paragraph F talks about taking pictures or filming without a person needing to be there to operate the camera. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'F' because this paragraph describes a method for filming bats automatically. It explains that photographers use a 'camera-tripping device' that makes the camera take a picture every time a bat flies past it. The paragraph uses the key phrase 'unmanned shooting', which directly means shooting without human effort. |
