Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Early astronomers thought the sun was mostly iron. In the 1920s, Cecilia Payne carefully reinterpreted the light data and argued that the sun is about 90% hydrogen and mostly helium, but other scientists rejected her because they couldn’t see how hydrogen could make the sun so hot. Later, the discovery of nuclear fusion (hydrogen atoms combining into helium) showed how the sun produces its energy and proved Payne was right.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for sentences describing contemporary astronomers' reactions to Payne's spectroscopic reading—look for language indicating whether they accepted any part of her interpretation versus rejecting her conclusions about the sun's interior.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.The passage provides the strongest support for believing that some scientists in the 1920s held which one of the following views regarding Payne's interpretation of the spectroscopic data relating to the sun?
Correct Answer
D
The passage states that Payne's careful reanalysis showed the spectra could be read as indicating a hydrogen- and helium-dominated sun, but contemporaries largely rejected her conclusions. Support: "Analyzed without preconceptions, she found, the data could be consistently read as indicating that ... 90 percent of the sun is hydrogen and most of the remainder is helium." Yet: "Most astronomers at the time dismissed Payne's interpretation, and some sought to explain it away simply by claiming that what she had examined was data about the sun's outer surface rather than its interior." These lines show some scientists treated her spectroscopic reading as applicable to observed surface spectra (not entirely ill founded) but rejected the overall conclusion about the sun's interior composition—matching choice D.
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