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Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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10 Feb 2019, 02:19
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Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of red giant and supergiant stars. When the core of a giant star whose mass surpasses 1.4 times the present mass of our Sun (M⊙) exhausts its nuclear fuel, it is unable to support its own weight and collapses into a tiny neutron star. The gravitational energy released during this implosion of the core blows off the remainder of the star in a gigantic explosion, or a supernova. Since around 50 percent of all stars are believed to begin their lives with masses greater than 1.4 M⊙ we might expect that one out of every two stars would die as a supernova. But in fact, only one star in thirty dies such a violent death. The rest expire much more peacefully as planetary nebulas. Apparently most massive stars manage to lose sufficient material that their masses drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙ before they exhaust their nuclear fuel.
Evidence supporting this view comes from observations of IRC + 10216, a pulsating giant star located 700 light-years away from Earth. A huge rate of mass loss (One M⊙ every 10,000 years) has been deduced from infrared observations of ammonia (NH3) molecules located in the circumstellar cloud around IRC + 10216. Recent microwave observations of carbon monoxide (CO) molecules indicate a similar rate of mass loss and demonstrate that the escaping material extends outward from the star for a distance of at least one light-year. Because we know the size of the cloud around IRC + 10216 and can use our observations of either NH3 or CO to measure the outflow velocity, we can calculate an age for the circumstellar cloud. IRC + 10216 has apparently expelled, in the form of molecules and dust grains, a mass equal to that of our entire Sun within the past ten thousand years. This implies that some stars can shed huge amounts of the matter very quickly and thus may never expire as supernovas. Theoretical models, as well as statistics on supernovas and planetary nebulas, suggest that stars that begin their lives with masses around 6 M⊙ shed sufficient material to drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙. IRC + 10216, for example, should do this in a mere 50,000 years from its birth, only an instant in the life of a star.
But what place does IRC + 10216 have in stellar evolution? Astronomers suggest that stars like IRC + 10216 are actually "protoplanetary nebulas"—old giant stars whose dense cores have almost but not quite rid themselves of the fluffy envelopes of gas around them. Once the star has lost the entire envelope, its exposed core becomes the central star of the planetary nebula and heats and ionizes the last vestiges of the envelope as it flows away into space. This configuration is a full-fledged planetary nebula, long familiar to optical astronomers.
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70% (03:17) correct
30% (03:18) wrong based on 66 sessions
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21. The primary purpose of the passage is to
(A) offer a method of calculating the age of circumstellar clouds (B) describe the conditions that result in a star's expiring as a supernova (C) discuss new evidence concerning the composition of planetary nebulas (D) explain why fewer stars than predicted expire supernovas (E) survey conflicting theories concerning the composition of circumstellar clouds
54% (01:05) correct
46% (01:02) wrong based on 63 sessions
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23. The view to which Evidence supporting this view comes from serves to
(A) reconcile seemingly contradictory facts (B) undermine a previously held theory (C) take into account data previously held to be insignificant (D) resolve a controversy (E) question new methods of gathering data
65% (01:23) correct
35% (01:50) wrong based on 66 sessions
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24. It can be inferred from the passage that the author assumes which of the following in the discussion of the rate at which IRC + 10216 loses mass?
(A) The circumstellar cloud surrounding IRC + 10216 consists only of CO and NH3 molecules. (B) The circumstellar cloud surrounding IRC + 10216 consists of material expelled from that star. (C) The age of a star is equal to that of its circumstellar cloud. (D) The rate at which IRC + 10216 loses mass varies significantly from year to year. (E) Stars with a mass greater than 6 M⊙ lose mass at a rate faster than stars with a mass less than 6 M⊙ do.
26% (01:51) correct
74% (01:53) wrong based on 61 sessions
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25. According to information provided by the passage, which of the following stars would astronomers most likely describe as a planetary nebula?
(A) A star that began its life with a mass of 5.5 M⊙, has exhausted its nuclear fuel, and has a core that is visible to astronomers (B) A star that began its life with a mass of 6 M⊙, lost mass at a rate of 1 M⊙ per 10,000 years, and exhausted its nuclear fuel in 40,000 years (C) A star that has exhausted its nuclear fuel, has a mass of 1.2 M⊙, and is surrounded by a circumstellar cloud that obscures its core from view (D) A star that began its life with a mass greater than 6 M⊙, has just recently exhausted its nuclear fuel, and is in the process of releasing massive amounts of gravitational energy (E) A star that began its life with a mass of 5.5 M⊙, has yet to exhaust its nuclear fuel, and exhibits a rate of mass loss similar to that of IRC + 10216
65% (01:07) correct
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26. Which of the following statements would be most likely to follow the last sentence of the passage?
(A) Supernovas are not necessarily the most spectacular events that astronomers have occasion to observe. (B) Apparently, stars that have a mass of greater than 6 M⊙ are somewhat rare. (C) Recent studies of CO and NH3 in the circum-stellar clouds of stars similar to IRC + 10216 have led astronomers to believe that the formation of planetary nebulas precedes the development of supernovas. (D) It appears, then, that IRC + 10216 actually represents an intermediate step in the evolution of a giant star into a planetary nebula. (E) Astronomers have yet to develop a consistently accurate method for measuring the rate at which a star exhausts its nuclear fuel.
81% (00:34) correct
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27. Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?
(A) New Methods of Calculating the Age of Circumstellar Clouds (B) New Evidence Concerning the Composition of Planetary Nebulas (C) Protoplanetary Nebula: A Rarely Observed Phenomenon (D) Planetary Nebulas: An Enigma to Astronomers (E) The Diminution of a Star's Mass: A Crucial Factor in Stellar Evolution
Re: Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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Updated on: 15 Mar 2019, 09:42
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Expert Reply
21. The primary purpose is introduced in the first paragraph. The central problem is: "we might expect that one out of every two stars would die as a supernova. But in fact, only one star in thirty dies such a violent death." How do we explain that paradox? The passage attempts to explain one possible theory. D is the best choice.
22. Here's the relevant portion: "Theoretical models, as well as statistics on supernovas and planetary nebulas, suggest that stars that begin their lives with masses around 6 M⊙ shed sufficient material to drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙. IRC + 10216, for example, should do this in a mere 50,000 years from its birth, only an instant in the life of a star." IRC + 10216 is given as an illustration of a star who begins its life with a mass around 6 M⊙ and sheds down to below 1.4 M⊙ by the end of its life. Hence, IRC + 10216 must have started its life at around 6 M⊙.
23. The pronoun "this" in "this view" refers to the fact that "most massive stars manage to lose sufficient material that their masses drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙ before they exhaust their nuclear fuel." The fact is mentioned as an explanation of the paradox that most stars are born larger than 1.4 M⊙ but do not end as supernovas. Since such large stars should create supernovas, the mentioned view serves to reconcile the seemingly contradictory facts.
24. The rate of matter loss is measured by observing the circumstellar cloud. The point here is that matter lossed by the star becomes part of the cloud. If the cloud does not consist of material expelled by the star, then the composition of the cloud would not relate to the star itself.
25. Here's the relevant portion: "Once the star has lost the entire envelope, its exposed core becomes the central star of the planetary nebula and heats and ionizes the last vestiges of the envelope as it flows away into space. This configuration is a full-fledged planetary nebula, long familiar to optical astronomers." If it is familiar to optical astronomers, that means it must be able to be seen. A planetary nebula occurs when a star finishes it's life cycle (running out of nuclear fuel) and is now just an exposed core. This correlates best with choice A.
26. The final paragraph labels IRC + 10216 as a "protoplanetary nebulas" that has almost, but not quite, used up its fuel. It thus falls between a normal giant star and a full-fledged planetary nebula. Choice D fits bets with this assessment, summing up the contents of the final paragraph.
27. Since we're summarizing the content, this is kind of like a primary purpose question. Crucially, the passage is attempting to answer a question: Why do most stars, despite their size, end as nebulas instead of supernovas? Certainly, the passage is not just about methods of calculation, nor is it primarily concerned with composition, eliminating A and B. We have no evidence that protoplanetary nebulas are rare, eliminating C. Between D and E, choice D does not address the passages main question, while E does. The answer to the question is that stars get smaller with time, and that's the big point the passage is making.
Re: Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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23 Aug 2019, 08:16
MagooshStudentHelp wrote:
21. The primary purpose is introduced in the first paragraph. The central problem is: "we might expect that one out of every two stars would die as a supernova. But in fact, only one star in thirty dies such a violent death." How do we explain that paradox? The passage attempts to explain one possible theory. D is the best choice.
22. Here's the relevant portion: "Theoretical models, as well as statistics on supernovas and planetary nebulas, suggest that stars that begin their lives with masses around 6 M⊙ shed sufficient material to drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙. IRC + 10216, for example, should do this in a mere 50,000 years from its birth, only an instant in the life of a star." IRC + 10216 is given as an illustration of a star who begins its life with a mass around 6 M⊙ and sheds down to below 1.4 M⊙ by the end of its life. Hence, IRC + 10216 must have started its life at around 6 M⊙.
23. The pronoun "this" in "this view" refers to the fact that "most massive stars manage to lose sufficient material that their masses drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙ before they exhaust their nuclear fuel." The fact is mentioned as an explanation of the paradox that most stars are born larger than 1.4 M⊙ but do not end as supernovas. Since such large stars should create supernovas, the mentioned view serves to reconcile the seemingly contradictory facts.
24. The rate of matter loss is measured by observing the circumstellar cloud. The point here is that matter lossed by the star becomes part of the cloud. If the cloud does not consist of material expelled by the star, then the composition of the cloud would not relate to the star itself.
25. Here's the relevant portion: "Once the star has lost the entire envelope, its exposed core becomes the central star of the planetary nebula and heats and ionizes the last vestiges of the envelope as it flows away into space. This configuration is a full-fledged planetary nebula, long familiar to optical astronomers." If it is familiar to optical astronomers, that means it must be able to be seen. A planetary nebula occurs when a star finishes it's life cycle (running out of nuclear fuel) and is now just an exposed core. This correlates best with choice A.
26. The final paragraph labels IRC + 10216 as a "protoplanetary nebulas" that has almost, but not quite, used up its fuel. It thus falls between a normal giant star and a full-fledged planetary nebula. Choice D fits bets with this assessment, summing up the contents of the final paragraph.
27. Since we're summarizing the content, this is kind of like a primary purpose question. Crucially, the passage is attempting to answer a question: Why do most stars, despite their size, end as nebulas instead of supernovas? Certainly, the passage is not just about methods of calculation, nor is it primarily concerned with composition, eliminating A and B. We have no evidence that protoplanetary nebulas are rare, eliminating C. Between D and E, choice D does not address the passages main question, while E does. The answer to the question is that stars get smaller with time, and that's the big point the passage is making.
Hi, could you please explain the question 25, why not E? Isn't IRC + 10216 a nebulas?
Re: Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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23 Aug 2019, 10:52
Expert Reply
This is a very tough question. Under pressure, you need HUGE control of the argument to reply correctly .
(A) A star that began its life with a mass of 5.5 M⊙, has exhausted its nuclear fuel, and has a core that is visible to astronomers
The gravitational energy released during this implosion of the core blows off the remainder of the star in a gigantic explosion, or a supernova. But in fact, only one star in thirty dies such a violent death. The rest expire much more peacefully as planetary nebulas.
All that means the core is visible by astronomers because we do not have an explosion
Apparently most massive stars manage to lose sufficient material that their masses drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙ before they exhaust their nuclear fuel.
(E) A star that began its life with a mass of 5.5 M⊙, has yet to exhaust its nuclear fuel,and exhibits a rate of mass loss similar to that of IRC + 10216
Theoretical models, as well as statistics on supernovas and planetary nebulas, suggest that stars that begin their lives with masses around 6 M⊙ shed sufficient material to drop below the critical value of 1.4 M⊙. IRC + 10216, for example, should do this in a mere 50,000 years from its birth, only an instant in the life of a star.
From this, we do not know that RC + 10216 releases the fuel very quickly which means that in E the yet exhausted nuclear fuel is not totally true and the rate loss is different.
Moreover, planetary nebula has a mass of more than 5.5 but IRC more than 6.0 which is different.
Re: Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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07 Nov 2019, 06:23
1
vanjaninikhil wrote:
q25: what would option C be described as? in my opinion planetary nebula..
Astronomers suggest that stars like IRC + 10216 are actually "protoplanetary nebulas"—old giant stars whose dense cores have almost but not quite rid themselves of the fluffy envelopes of gas around them.
So, option C would be called as "protoplanetary nebulas"
Until recently astronomers have been puzzled by the fate of
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01 Jun 2021, 19:15
1
Astronomers suggest that stars like IRC + 10216 are actually "protoplanetary nebulas"—old giant stars whose dense cores have almost but not quite rid themselves of the fluffy envelopes of gas around them.
Once the star has lost the entire envelope, its exposed core becomes the central star of the planetary nebula
vanjaninikhil wrote:
q25: what would option C be described as? in my opinion planetary nebula..