Library/PT 115/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Near 1900, scientists thought all electromagnetic radiation behaved like smooth waves whose energy could take any value, but experiments on "blackbody" objects showed far less short-wavelength (ultraviolet) radiation than expected — the so-called "ultraviolet catastrophe." Max Planck fixed this by proposing that energy is released in tiny, discrete packets rather than continuously, and Einstein and others later showed light acts like particles (photons) emitted in those packets; together these ideas replaced the wave-only view and started modern quantum theory.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: determine the passage's primary purpose by following the historical progression it outlines: classical wave theory's problems with blackbody radiation, Planck's discrete-energy proposal, and Einstein's photon justification. Supporting lines: "With the approach of the twentieth century, the classical wave theory of radiation... began to encounter obstacles."; "Planck discarded the assumption of radiation's smooth energy continuum..."; "So in just a few years, what was considered a catastrophe generated a new vision in physics that led to theories still in place today."

Passage Stimulus

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23.

The passage is primarily concerned with

Correct Answer
D
The passage examines a critical stage in the evolution of theories about the nature of radiation: it describes how experimental trouble with blackbody radiation (the 'ultraviolet catastrophe') challenged classical wave theory, how Planck offered a discrete-energy hypothesis that fit the data, and how Einstein and others provided theoretical justification (photons) that changed the theoretical picture. Support: "The major challenge to wave theory was the behavior of thermal radiation..." (the 'ultraviolet catastrophe'); "Planck discarded the assumption of radiation's smooth energy continuum..."; "Einstein theorized... that radiation is composed of particles, now called photons..."; and "what was considered a catastrophe generated a new vision in physics that led to theories still in place today."
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