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
Identify the function of the passage's final paragraph: does it explain why Payne's contemporaries resisted her claim, give Payne's reason for rejecting the iron hypothesis, or do something else? Focus on sentences that link the absence of an accepted energy mechanism to contemporaries' reluctance and on the later confirmation by nuclear-fusion theory.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.The author's discussion of nuclear fusion in the last paragraph serves primarily to
Correct Answer
B
'Absent a generally accepted explanation of how hydrogen and helium could produce the sun's energy, Payne's findings could not easily override her contemporaries' preconceptions.' This sentence directly says the lack of an accepted mechanism for how H and He could power the sun helps explain why astronomers resisted Payne. The paragraph continues: 'But this process—so well charted today that even elementary physics textbooks discuss it—was inadequately understood in the 1920s.' and 'The emergence of that understanding—which relied on Einstein's equation governing the relationship between mass and energy—eventually provided strong confirmation of Payne's results.' Together these lines show the paragraph's primary purpose is to explain (in part) Payne's colleagues' reactions and to note that later theoretical work vindicated her interpretation.
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