Saturn's Rings — Particle Collisions & Energy Transfer
GED Science Practice — Reading tables, data analysis & scientific reasoning
Read the passage
Saturn's rings contain enormous numbers of particles. These particles sometimes experience collisions with each other. Scientists need to know how those collisions transfer energy in order to model the overall structure and composition of the rings. Images of particles in Saturn's rings reveal that only 50–60% of the particles' energy remains after a collision. To identify which types of particles could explain the observations, a scientist tests substances in a laboratory and measures the energy remaining after collisions between particles of those substances. The table shows the scientist's results.
| Material | Energy Remaining |
|---|---|
| bedrock | 95% |
| carbon rock | 83% |
| ice | 50% |
| loose rocks | 24% |
| loose snow | 20% |
GED question: Based on these results and assuming that whenever two materials are present their remaining energy is averaged, what would the scientist best conclude to be the composition of Saturn's rings?
You may use the calculator.
Saturn's rings — drag to rotate & explore
Saturn's rings are made of billions of particles that constantly collide with each other
What is this question about?
Saturn's rings contain enormous numbers of particles. When particles collide, some of their kinetic energy is lost (transferred as heat, sound, or deformation). Scientists observed that in Saturn's rings, only 50–60% of particle energy remains after a collision.
A scientist then tested 5 different materials in a lab, measuring energy remaining after collisions. The question asks: based on the data, what is the best conclusion about the composition (what it's made of) of Saturn's rings?
Key rule: When two materials are present in equal amounts, their remaining energy values are averaged.
Energy in particles after a collision
Lab results — energy remaining after collisions between particles of each material.
| Material | Energy Remaining After Collision | Matches 50–60% target? |
|---|---|---|
| Bedrock | 95% | ✗ Too high (way above 60%) |
| Carbon rock | 83% | ✗ Too high (above 60%) |
| Ice | 50% | ✓ Matches perfectly! |
| Loose rocks | 24% | ✗ Too low (below 50%) |
| Loose snow | 20% | ✗ Too low (below 50%) |
Visualizing energy remaining by material
The green zone (50–60%) is the target range based on Saturn's ring observations. Only ice and certain combinations hit this zone.
Understanding what "energy remaining" means
Calculating combined energy for each answer choice
When two materials are present in equal amounts, average their energy values: (A + B) ÷ 2. The result must fall in the 50–60% target range to match Saturn's observations.
| Answer choice | Energy A | Energy B | Average (A+B)÷2 | In 50–60%? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Equal amounts of loose rocks + loose snow | 24% | 20% | 22% | ✗ Too low |
| Equal amounts of ice + bedrock | 50% | 95% | 72.5% | ✗ Too high |
| Small bedrock + large carbon rock (Not equal amounts — cannot simply average) |
95% | 83% | ~89%+ | ✗ Way too high |
| Large ice + smaller carbon rock (Mostly ice, some carbon rock) |
50% | 83% | ~55–60% | ✓ In range! |
Step-by-step working for the correct answer
With mostly ice (50%) and some carbon rock (83%):
Weighted average = closer to 50% (ice-dominant) → lands ~55–60% ✓
Try it yourself — mix two materials
Select two materials and a mixing ratio to see the combined energy remaining. Find what hits the 50–60% target!
All single materials — do any hit 50–60%?
| Material | Energy Remaining | In 50–60% range? |
|---|---|---|
| Bedrock | 95% | ✗ No — too high |
| Carbon rock | 83% | ✗ No — too high |
| Ice | 50% | ✓ Yes! Exactly at lower bound |
| Loose rocks | 24% | ✗ No — too low |
| Loose snow | 20% | ✗ No — too low |
Breaking down all four answer choices
"Based on these results, what would the scientist best conclude to be the composition of Saturn's rings?"
Calculation: (24% + 20%) ÷ 2 = 22%
This is far below the 50–60% target. Both materials lose too much energy in collisions. ✗
Calculation: (50% + 95%) ÷ 2 = 72.5%
This is well above the 50–60% target. Bedrock retains too much energy, pulling the average too high. ✗
Even mostly carbon rock (83%) with a small bit of bedrock (95%) gives an average well above 83% — far above the target. Both materials are too high individually. ✗
Ice = 50%, Carbon rock = 83%. Equal mix = 66.5% (slightly above).
But with more ice than carbon rock, the weighted average shifts closer to ice's 50% — landing in the 55–60% zone. This is the only combination that fits within 50–60%. ✓
GED strategy — data table reasoning questions
Reasoning: Ice (50%) + carbon rock (83%), weighted toward more ice, gives ~55–60% — the only combination that falls within Saturn's observed 50–60% energy-remaining range.
