Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Scientists did experiments on uranium from 1934 to 1939 and kept finding strange, tiny amounts of radioactive substances, but they didn't understand what was happening because they expected different results and the samples were hard to study. Lise Meitner realized those strange products were pieces of a uranium atom, explained that the nucleus had been split, and called this process nuclear fission.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what factor the passage identifies as the primary reason recognition of fission was delayed (look for text about researchers' expectations and the missing conceptual link); choose the option that removes that barrier.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage26.Given the information in the passage, which one of the following, if true, would have been most likely to reduce the amount of time it took for physicists to realize that atoms were being split?
Correct Answer
B
The passage states that the products 'remained unidentified ... more significantly because of the expectation that they would all be elements close to uranium in nuclear composition.' It also says that 'the relevant evidence ... had been present for some time, lacking mainly the right conceptual link.' If the experimenters 'did not have particular expectations regarding the likely nuclear composition of the by-products' (choice B), they would have been more open to identifying unexpected products (e.g., Hahn's barium result) and thus would likely have realized that atoms were being split more quickly.
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