Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In the late 1990s astronomers found that distant exploding stars show the universe is not slowing down but actually expanding faster and faster. To explain this, most scientists propose “dark energy,” a mysterious pressure or energy in empty space (possibly from tiny virtual particles) that pushes space outward, though calculated vacuum energy doesn't match the amount needed. Another idea says gravity changes its behavior over billions of light-years, which would be a radical revision of physics but might be testable in our solar system. Both ideas would upend the usual picture of the universe.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the function of the final sentence: it compares the two theories and highlights testability as an advantage for the second (radical) theory.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.The primary purpose of the last sentence of the passage is to
Correct Answer
B
The final sentence explicitly frames testability as a favorable consideration: "Because these implications could be tested in our own solar system, this might actually be an advantage for the radical theory, since it means that this theory may be easier to test than the dark energy theory." Taken with the prior sentence that such a change "would presumably have significant implications for the way gravity works even at short distances," the author is pointing out that the ability to test those implications locally is a criterion that seems to favor the second theory. That is exactly what choice B says.
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