Paper 1 · Comprehension
UGC NET December 2022 (14.03.2023) Shift-II (Education)
Passage
For more than nine decades scientists have tried to replicate the process that produces energy for the sun and stars, fusion. On Tuesday, researchers at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) in California announced a milestone. They merged two nuclei to produce a heavier nucleus, and their reactor produced about 1.5 times more energy than what was used in the process. In all earlier attempts to harness fusion, the reactors used up more energy than they produced. But scientists say it will be at least two decades before the process pioneered in the California laboratory can be scaled up. Several countries are shifting to renewable energies to meet their climate-related commitments. Yet power generation currently is responsible for 25 to 30 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. The inherently unstable nature of renewables means countries find it very difficult to jettison fossil-fuel energy sources. Conventionally produced nuclear energy, which uses fission technology, is relatively cleaner. But accidents at Chernobyl in 1986 and Fukushima in 2011 have raised serious questions over the safety of fission-powered plants.
For every 100 units of energy consumed in the process of fusion, how many units of energy was the National Ignition Facility in California able to produce?
A50
B100
C125
D150 ✓ Correct
Correct answer: (D) 150 — The answer is 150.
Explanation
★The answer is 150.
★The reactor produced about 1.5 times the energy it used.
★So for every 100 units consumed, the output is 100 times 1.5.
★That equals 150 units.
★So the facility produced 150 units for every 100 used.
★The other figures do not fit the 1.5 times gain.
★So the answer is 150.
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