Bunuel
12 Days of Christmas 2024 - 2025 Competition with $40,000 of PrizesSome of the most advanced processors often need to rapidly switch between different tasks. However, during intensive computational activities, processors occasionally experience sudden drops in performance before resuming normal operation. One hypothesis is that the processor's thermal management system is unable to cope with the heat generated during such tasks, requiring a temporary reduction in processing speed; an alternative hypothesis is that the processor’s voltage regulators are unable to maintain a stable power supply under high demand, leading to performance drops.
Which of the following, if discovered in computational loads, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other?
A) When the computational load is suddenly increased, processors equipped with advanced cooling systems show no drop in performance, while those with standard cooling systems do.
B) Processors show a consistent decrease in performance as computational tasks become more complex, regardless of variations in the processor’s cooling system or voltage regulator quality.
C) Under high computational demand, processors that maintain a stable voltage supply do not exhibit performance drops, regardless of the efficiency of their cooling system.
D) When a processor’s cooling system is enhanced, it shows performance drops less frequently during computational tasks that are consistent in nature.
E) The more rapidly a task switches between different computational demands, the more frequently a processor experiences performance drops.
A) When the computational load is suddenly increased, processors equipped with advanced cooling systems show no drop in performance, while those with standard cooling systems do. - Incorrect. This strengthens the fact that excess heat could be a reason for the performance drop but does not undermine the other voltage hypothesis
B) Processors show a consistent decrease in performance as computational tasks become more complex, regardless of variations in the processor’s cooling system or voltage regulator quality. Incorrect. This statement does not strengthen one and weaken the other, rather, it has the same impact on both hypotheses.
C) Under high computational demand, processors that maintain a stable voltage supply do not exhibit performance drops, regardless of the efficiency of their cooling system. Correct. This strengthens the fact that the voltage hypothesis is correct by showing that heat-generated fluctuations have no impact if the voltage is stable.
D) When a processor’s cooling system is enhanced, it shows performance drops less frequently during computational tasks that are consistent in nature. Incorrect. This statement does not strengthen one and weaken the other, rather, it has the same impact on both hypotheses.
E) The more rapidly a task switches between different computational demands, the more frequently a processor experiences performance drops. Incorrect. This statement does not strengthen one or weaken the other but has the same impact on both hypotheses.