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
Locate passages explaining why Payne's conclusions were resisted; determine whether the author attributes that resistance to flaws in Payne's reasoning or to external factors (preconceptions and lack of theoretical explanation).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.Based on the information in the passage, it can be inferred that the author holds which one of the following views?
Correct Answer
A
The author presents Payne's claim as evidence-based and ultimately accepted while explaining why contemporaries resisted it. Supporting sentences: "Her claim, though substantiated by the evidence and later uniformly accepted, encountered strong resistance among professional astronomers." "She subjected the data to rigorous critical scrutiny and review." "Analyzed without preconceptions, she found... 90 percent of the sun is hydrogen and most of the remainder is helium." And: "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." Together these statements show the author views Payne's reasoning as sound and the resistance as due to others' preconceptions and the lack of an accepted energy-generation theory, not to major mistakes in her scientific reasoning.
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