Library/PT 152/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: Ask what role the Garriga and Vilenkin reference plays in the passage: does it challenge Carroll and Chen, illustrate a consequence, or resolve a prior problem? The reference appears right after the passage's statement of the puzzle about a low-entropy initial universe and supplies a mechanism that Carroll and Chen adopt. Supporting quotes: "While the Big Bang process and what followed obey the second law of thermodynamics, it is a mystery why there should have been a small, hot, and dense universe to begin with." "Recent research has shown that even empty space has faint traces of energy that fluctuate on the subatomic scale." "Physicists Jaume Garriga and Alexander Vilenkin have suggested that these fluctuations can generate their own big bangs in tiny areas widely separated in time and space." "Carroll and Chen take our universe, and others, to be such fluctuations in a high entropy multiverse."

Passage Stimulus

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24.

The author’s reference to a suggestion by Garriga and Vilenkin in the fifth paragraph primarily serves to

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the Garriga and Vilenkin suggestion is introduced immediately after the passage raises the puzzle that a low-entropy (small, hot, dense) universe is unlikely. The cited mechanism—fluctuations in empty space producing their own big bangs—provides the way Carroll and Chen explain how such an improbable initial state can arise within a high-entropy multiverse. The passage links the suggestion to Carroll and Chen's position: "Carroll and Chen take our universe, and others, to be such fluctuations...", showing the suggestion resolves the earlier puzzle within their theory.
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