1 |
According to the passage, which of the following is a direct perceptual consequence of interstellar dust? |
A. |
Some stars are rendered invisible to observers on Earth. |
B. |
Many visible stars are made to seem brighter than they really are. |
C. |
The presence of hydrogen and helium gas is revealed. |
D. |
The night sky appears dusty at all times to observers on Earth. |
E. |
The dust is conspicuously visible against a background of bright stars. |
2 |
It can be inferred from the passage that the density of interstellar material is |
A. |
Higher where distances between the stars are shorter |
B. |
Equal to that of interstellar dust |
C. |
Unusually low in the vicinity of our Sun |
D. |
Independent of the incidence of gaseous components |
E. |
Not homogeneous throughout interstellar space |
3 |
It can be inferred from the passage that it is because space is so vast that |
A. |
Little of the interstellar material in it seems substantial |
B. |
Normal units of volume seem futile for measurements of density |
C. |
Stars can be far enough from Earth to be obscured even by very sparsely distributed matter |
D. |
Interstellar gases can, for all practical purposes, be regarded as transparent |
E. |
Optical astronomy would be of little use even if no interstellar dust existed |