GMAT Reading Comprehension

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Source: PREP

Level: 3

In the 1980's, astronomer Bohdan Paczynski proposed a way of determining whether the enormous dark halo constituting the outermost part of the Milky Way galaxy is composed of MACHO's (massive compact halo objects), which are astronomical objects too dim to be visible. Paczynski reasoned that if MACHO's make up this halo, a MACHO would occasionally drift in front of a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a bright galaxy near the Milky Way. The gravity of a MACHO that had so drifted, astronomers agree, would cause the star's light rays, which would otherwise diverge, to bend together so that, as observed from Earth, the star would temporarily appear to brighten, a process known as microlensing. Because many individual stars are of intrinsically variable brightness, some astronomers have contended that the brightening of intrinsically variable stars can be mistaken for microlensing. However, whereas the different colors of light emitted by an intrinsically variable star are affected differently when the star brightens, all of a star's colors are equally affected by microlensing. Thus, if a MACHO magnifies a star's red light tenfold, it will do the same to the star's blue light and yellow light. Moreover, it is highly unlikely that a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud will undergo microlensing more than once, because the chance that a second MACHO would pass in front of exactly the same star is minuscule.

Question List: 1 2 3

According to the passage, Paczynski's theory presumes that if MACHO's constituted the Milky Way's dark halo, occasionally a MACHO would

  • A drift so as to lie in a direct line between two stars in the outer Milky Way
  • B affect the light rays of a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud with the result that the star would seem for a time to brighten
  • C become obscured as a result of the microlensing of a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud
  • D temporarily increase the apparent brightness of a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud by increasing the gravity of the star
  • E magnify each color in the spectrum of a star in the Large Magellanic Cloud by a different amount

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