Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT128 S4 P3 Q14 Explanation

Cecilia Payne

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Passage

In the early 1900s, most astronomers mistakenly believed that 66 percent of the sun's substance was iron. As a graduate student at Harvard University in the 1920s, Cecilia Payne—later a professor of astronomy there—argued pioneeringly that the sun is instead composed largely of hydrogen and helium. later uniformly accepted, encountered strong resistance among professional astronomers.

The orthodox view that the sun was mainly iron was buttressed by the knowledge that Earth and all known asteroids contain iron. Also, the evidence from spectroscopy—a technique used to identify chemicals by the distinctive spectral properties of the light patterns they emit when heated to incandescence—was generally taken to show that "iron" hypothesis had to be reexamined, together with the extensive spectroscopic data alleged to support it.

Preliminary examination of the spectroscopic data convinced Payne that they lent themselves to multiple readings. She suspected that preconceptions about the sun's makeup as being mainly iron might have led to skewed interpretations of that data, and this led her to subject the data to rigorous critical scrutiny and review. Analyzed without that what she had examined was data about the sun's outer surface rather than its interior.

Absent a generally accepted explanation of how hydrogen and helium could produce the sun's energy, Payne's findings could not easily override her contemporaries' preconceptions. We now know that the sun's heat is generated through nuclear fusion: the sun's gravitational force compresses together atoms of hydrogen, causing a nuclear reaction. This reaction produces on Einstein's equation governing the relationship between mass and energy—eventually provided strong confirmation of Payne's results.

What this question is testing

Five Questions

Topic

The author is telling the story of a young female scientist in the 1920s who got the sun right when everyone else had it wrong — and how the establishment took years to catch up with her.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy. The author isn't arguing against Payne's critics — they're showcasing how a real discovery can be resisted because the underlying physics doesn't yet exist to explain it.

Main Point

The simpler version: Cecilia Payne, as a grad student, looked at the same data everyone else was using and concluded the sun is mostly hydrogen and helium, not iron. She was right. But her contemporaries dismissed her because they couldn't see how hydrogen could produce the sun's heat. Once Einstein's mass-energy equation and the idea of nuclear fusion came along, the puzzle was solved — and Payne's finding was finally accepted.

P1: The pioneer

Almost everyone thought the sun was mostly iron. A grad student named Cecilia Payne disagreed. She turned out to be right, but the establishment fought her.

P2: Why the iron view felt obvious

Earth has iron, asteroids have iron, and the spectroscopic data looked like it pointed to iron too. But there was a problem: Lord Kelvin's theory of how the sun produced heat required it to be only 20 million years old — and the fossil record clearly said billions. So Payne thought the iron story had to be wrong.

P3: Reading the data fresh

Payne suspected that what people thought they were seeing in the spectroscopic data was distorted by what they expected to see. When she looked without that preconception, the data fit a sun that's 90% hydrogen, mostly helium for the rest, and only a bit of iron. Other astronomers tried to explain her finding away — for instance by claiming she was only seeing the outer surface, not the interior.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
14.

The passage provides enough information to answer which one of the

Answer choices

  1. Too Specific: percent6% picked this

    Does the iron content of Earth exceed 50 percent of its

    All we know on this comes from the first sentence of the 2nd paragraph: Earth and all known asteroids contain iron. We have no clue what % of its mass is iron, though.

  2. Too Specific: who8% picked this

    Who first proved that the sun generates heat from hydrogen by

    All we know on this comes from the 2nd sentence of the final paragraph: We now know that the sun's heat is generated through nuclear fusion. But we're never told who made that discovery.

  3. Correct75% picked this

    Do any objects in the solar system other than Earth and the

    Why this is right

    Well, thank you choice (A) for making us search the first sentence of the 2nd paragraph: Earth and all known asteroids contain iron. Is an asteroid an object in the solar system? Yes. In fact there's an asteroid belt between the inner rocky planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) and the outer gaseous plants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune).

    Skill tested: Five Questions · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Too Specific: what percentage6% picked this

    What percentage of the sun's mass is composed

    We know from the first sentence that scientists used to mistakenly believe that 66% of the sun was iron, so we know the answer isn't 66%. We also know from Payne's eventual findings that 90 percent of the sun is hydrogen and most of the remainder is helium, so iron might be 4%, 3%, 2%, 2.7%, 1.2%, etc. We can say that iron is "less than 5% of the sun's mass", but we can't actually say what percent is iron.

  5. Inverse Bait: other than hydrogen atoms5% picked this

    Can the fusion of atoms other than hydrogen atoms

    Fusion is only discussed in the beginning of the final paragraph, and we're only told about hydrogen atoms fusing to produce energy.

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