Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Physicists say the universe began as a tiny, extremely hot point that expanded rapidly (the Big Bang) and has cooled since. Carroll and Chen argue that such big bangs probably happen many times inside a much larger multiverse, which is mostly cold, empty space. Tiny random energy fluctuations in empty space can sometimes spark small regions that inflate into new universes, so our universe may be one of many such rare fluctuations rather than a unique event.
Logic Breakdown
Read the sentence that defines 'multiverse' and mentions what lies 'beyond our "cosmic bubble"' — the surrounding context shows whether the phrase refers to a region (our universe) or something else.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.Which one of the following comes closest to capturing what the term “cosmic bubble ” means in the last sentence of the second paragraph?
Correct Answer
B
Relevant sentences: "This is based on the suggestion of some physicists that the Big Bang was the beginning of our universe as we know it, but not the beginning of a larger Universe—or 'multiverse'—that encompasses everything, including that which we can never see because it is beyond our \"cosmic bubble\"." and "Carroll and Chen take our universe, and others, to be such fluctuations in a high entropy multiverse." These statements identify the 'cosmic bubble' as the portion of the larger multiverse that is our universe — i.e., the universe contained in the multiverse.
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