Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many people think old window glass slowly flows downward so it becomes thicker at the bottom, but scientists say this is a myth. Although glass atoms aren’t arranged in a crystal, cooled glass acts like a solid, and calculations show medieval glass would take far longer than the universe’s age to sag noticeably. Different glass types or impurities wouldn’t change that over just a few hundred years, and glass needs very high heat to flow. The uneven thickness of old windows is much more likely from how the glass was made and installed—older methods left thick edges that were placed at the bottom—while modern techniques make very flat glass.
Logic Breakdown
Refer to sentences about glass's amorphous atomic structure and the glass-transition temperature; use the passage's statements that glass needs to be heated to a few hundred °C (≈350°C) before it can flow appreciably.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.The passage suggests that the atomic structure of glass is such that glass will
Correct Answer
D
D is correct. The passage states that "Glass does not have a precise freezing point; rather, it has what is known as a glass transition temperature, typically a range of a few hundred degrees Celsius." It also notes that "for glass to have more than a negligible ability to flow, it would have to be heated to at least 350 degrees Celsius," and that "Under the force of gravity, certain solid materials including glass can, in fact, flow slightly." Together these statements support the inference that glass will flow downward under its own weight if heated to its glass-transition temperature.
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