Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Marie Curie began studying radiation in 1897, tested metals and a mineral called pitchblende, and found pitchblende more radioactive than uranium, which led her to discover polonium and radium. She observed uranium giving off radiation at a steady rate and concluded each element’s radiation was constant, but she could not explain how radiation happened. Later scientists learned that radiation comes from certain kinds of atoms (isotopes) slowly breaking down and that emission rates actually fall over time; Curie couldn’t have known this because many radioactive forms of light elements had already decayed away and people in her time did not understand atoms the way we do now. Despite her limited explanations, her experiments made the later discoveries possible.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what role the first paragraph plays in the passage as a whole: it reports Curie's experiments, findings, and immediate conclusions — facts that the remainder of the passage evaluates and contextualizes.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.The primary function of the first paragraph of the passage is to
Correct Answer
C
The first paragraph recounts Curie's experimental steps and conclusions (facts the author later evaluates). For example: 'She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none... She then tested pitchblende... and discovered that it was more radioactive than uranium,' and 'Based on these results, Curie concluded that the emission rate for a given element was constant.' The second paragraph then contrasts those facts with current knowledge ('It is now known that... emission rates are not constant but decrease very slowly with time') and defends Curie. Thus the first paragraph's primary function is to provide the factual background for that later evaluation.
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