To glass researchers it seems somewhat strange that many people throughout the world share the persistent belief that window glass flows slowly downward like a very viscous liquid. ████████ ██ █████████ ██████ ██ ███████ ████████ ███ ██████████ ███ ████ ███ █████ ████ ███████ ██ ███████ ██████ ███████ ██ ███ ███████ ███
Support for hypothesis ·In 19th century, had to make glass in way that thickened the edges
People probably put thicker edges toward bottom for structural stability.
Passage Style
Critique or debate
Phenomenon-hypothesis
24.
The passage suggests that the ██████ █████████ ██ █████ ██ ████ ████ █████ ████
Question Type
Implied
In this Inference question, we are looking for what the passage suggests about the atomic structure of glass. Look to the second half of P1 for information about the atomic structure of glass.
a
behave as a ██████ ████ ██████ ██ ███ ███████ ██████████ ██ ██████
Unsupported. When glass has the properties of solids, it is cooled below the transition temperature range, at which point the glass will behave as a solid.
Anti-supported. In P2, we see that this period is trillions of years, not a few millennia.
c
behave as a █████ ████ ████ ██ ███ ███████ ███ █████ ██████████ ███████████
Anti-supported. In P1, we see that when glass is cooled below the transition temperature range, glass takes on the physical properties of a solid. In other words, the lower end of the transition temperature range is the point at which glass behaves as a solid. From this, we can infer that when glass reaches the transition temperature, it does not behave as a solid.
This is supported. In P1, we see that when glass is cooled below the transition temperature range, glass takes on the physical properties of a solid. In other words, the lower end of the transition temperature range is the point at which glass begins to behave as a solid. From this, we can infer that when glass heats to the transition temperature, it has properties of liquids, so glass will flow downward at these temperatures.
Anti-supported. We know that the atoms of glass aren’t arranged in a fixed crystalline structure, so this won’t be the only condition under which glass stops flowing.
Difficulty
35% of people who answer get this correct
This is a very difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%157
174
75%180
Analysis
Implied
Critique or debate
Phenomenon-hypothesis
Science
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
25%
163
b
5%
160
c
31%
163
d
35%
166
e
3%
159
Question history
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