1. According to the rubble-pile hypothesis, an advantage conferred on a low-density asteroid is that it is
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a porous body such as a rubble pile can withstand a battering much better than an integral object.
Hence, (C) is correct as it can withstand a powerful impact better than a solid asteroid.
2. How would the author of the passage most likely respond to the assertion of another scientist claiming that a crater greater than the radius of an asteroid is a result of an impact?
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Most of them have one or more extraordinarily large craters, some of which are wider than the mean radius of the whole body. Such colossal impacts would not just gouge out a crater—they would break any monolithic body into pieces. In short, asteroids larger than a kilometer across may look like nuggets of hard rock but are more likely to be aggregate assemblages—or even piles of loose rubble so pervasively fragmented that no solid bedrock is left.
On impact, a solid (monolithic) asteroid will break into pieces while an assemblage of fragments can withstand the impact due to which a crater forms. So, we have evidence about the asteroid not being monolithic. Hence, (E) is correct.
(A) is wrong because it assumes that some part of the asteroid is solid while the rest of it consists of regolith. But this isn't true.
(B) is opposite of what is mentioned in the passage. A great degree of fragmentation means that an asteroid wouldn't have a solid bedrock. (C) and (D) are not mentioned in the passage.
3. The primary purpose of the passage is to
We can eliminate (A) because a conventional theory (i.e. asteroids are monolithic) is refuted. (B) is wrong because there is nothing as such in the passage. (C) cannot be the primary purpose, the old theory is refuted and a new theory is explained. (D) is incorrect because for providing support to the new theory, all the 'oft-looked over' details are being considered. They cannot be called common features of an asteroid. (E) is correct because ultimately the new theory is being proven to be correct and computer modeling is also proof for this.
4. The example of the sandcastle (in the second paragraph) serves to
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The truth is neither strength nor gravity can be ignored. Paltry though it may be, gravity binds a rubble pile together. And anybody who builds sandcastles knows that even loose debris can cohere.
(D) is the right answer because the hypothesis takes into consideration the various minuscule forces that were previously ignored (the cohesive forces between the loose debris in a sandcastle is analogous to that of the rubble-pile hypothesis)
5. The reason that graphs of asteroid rotation rates lack the expected statistical tail associated with high rotational rates is that
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If nearly all asteroids are rubble piles, however, this tail would be missing, because any rubble pile spinning faster than once every two or three hours would fly apart.
So, (B) is correct.
6. Schumaker originally conceived of the rubble hypothesis because he surmised that
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a porous body such as a rubble pile can withstand a battering much better than an integral object.
This question connects with Q.1. Hence, (C) is correct.
7. Scientists originally believed that asteroids lacked regolith because
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Originally, scientists predicted small asteroids to be hard and rocky, as any loose surface material (called regolith) generated by impacts was expected to escape their weak gravity. Aggregate small bodies were not thought to exist, because the slightest sustained relative motion would cause them to separate. But observations and computer modeling are proving otherwise.
(C), (D), (E) can be eliminated.
'Sizeable enough impact' keeps room for some doubt that in the case of smaller impacts, the regolith wouldn't escape the gravity of the asteroid.
However, (B) keeps no room for doubt that the gravitational forces are so weak, that the slightest motion would cause the regolith to separate. So, (B) is correct.