Venus in Transit Reading Answers: IELTS Reading Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Updated on Jan 15, 2025 18:46 IST

This passage on Venus in transit will aid your IELTS Exam preparation by enhancing your reading comprehension and critical thinking. By practising this text, you enhance skimming and scanning skills that are crucial to ace the IELTS Reading Exam. It covers historical observations, scientific challenges, and advancements in measuring astronomical distances, helping you tackle complex academic texts and understand detailed processes—skills crucial for the IELTS reading section.

IELTS Reading Venus in transit Reading Answers

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IELTS Prep Tips for Ant Intelligence Reading Passage

Tip Details
1. Skim for Main Ideas - Identify focus: Venus transits, their historical significance, and modern astronomical implications.
  - Passage Structure: 2004 transit event (A), Halley’s discovery (B-C), historical expeditions (D), challenges (E), scientific outcomes (F-G).
2. Summarize Each Paragraph - A: Description of the 2004 Venus transit and its historical context.
  - B: Edmond Halley’s discovery of using transits to calculate the AU.
  - C: Importance of measuring the AU and challenges due to Mercury’s limitations.
  - D: Historical expeditions and obstacles, including Le Gentil’s misfortunes.
  - E: Challenges like the ‘black drop’ effect and Venus’s halo of light.
  - F: Progress in calculating the AU and extending parallax to measure cosmic distances.
  - G: Modern significance of Venus transits for detecting Earth-like exoplanets.
3. Highlight Key Terms - Focus on terms like “transit,” “astronomical unit (AU),” “parallax angle,” “black drop effect,” “exoplanets.”
  - Note synonyms and paraphrases for historical events and astronomical principles.
4. Tackle Matching Headings - Example: “Difficulties in Making Accurate Observations” matches E.
5. Approach Sentence Completion - Key Strategy: Locate the part of the text discussing specific details, like black drop effect, radar measurement, or Edmond Halley’s contribution.
  - Ensure grammatical accuracy and context relevance while filling gaps.
6. Look for Cause and Effect - Example: Halley’s realization → Need for Venus transits → Expeditions to measure AU.
7. Analyze Vocabulary in Context - Focus on phrases like “diffraction of light,” “parallax principle,” “cosmic measuring rod.”
8. Practice Synonym Recognition - Recognize reworded expressions for complex ideas, such as “Venus surrounded by gases” = “halo of light around Venus.”
9. Time Management - Allocate 20 minutes for this passage, dividing time across questions effectively.
10. Double-Check Spelling - Ensure terms like “parallax,” “Philippines,” “astronomical spectacle” are spelled correctly.
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Venus in Transit Reading Passage

Below Reading Passage Venus in transit for your practice is inspired by Cambridge 9 IELTS Academic test 2. You should ideally spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13.

Venus in Transit 

June 2004 saw the first passage, known as a ‘transit’, of the planet Venus across the face of the Sun in 122 years. Transits have helped shape our view of the whole Universe, as Heather Cooper and Nigel Henbest explain

  1. On 8 June 2004, more than half the population of the world were treated to a rare astronomical event. For over six hours, the planet Venus steadily inched its way over the surface of the Sun. This ‘transit’ of Venus was the first since 6 December 1882. On that occasion, the American astronomer Professor Simon Newcomb led a party to South Africa to observe the event. They were based at a girls’ school, where - it is alleged - the combined forces of three schoolmistresses outperformed the professionals with the accuracy of their observations.
  2. For centuries, transits of Venus have drawn explorers and astronomers alike to the four corners of the globe. And you can put it all down to the extraordinary polymath Edmond Halley. In November 1677, Halley observed a transit of the innermost planet, Mercury, from the desolate island of St Helena in the South Pacific. He realised that, from different latitudes, the passage of the planet across the Sun’s disc would appear to differ. By timing the transit from two widely-separated locations, teams of astronomers could calculate the parallax angle - the apparent difference in position of an astronomical body due to a difference in the observer’s position. Calculating this angle would allow astronomers to measure what was then the ultimate goal: the distance of the Earth from the Sun. This distance is known as the astronomical unit’ or AU.
  3. Halley was aware that the AU was one of the most fundamental of all astronomical measurements. Johannes Kepler, in the early 17th century, had shown that the distances of the planets from the Sun governed their orbital speeds, which were easily measurable. But no-one had found a way to calculate accurate distances to the planets from the Earth. The goal was to measure the AU; then, knowing the orbital speeds of all the other planets round the Sun, the scale of the Solar System would fall into place. However, Halley realised that Mercury was so far away that its parallax angle would be very difficult to determine. As Venus was closer to the Earth, its parallax angle would be larger, and Halley worked out that by using Venus it would be possible to measure the Suns distance to 1 part in 500. But there was a problem: transits of Venus, unlike those of Mercury, are rare, occurring in pairs roughly eight years apart every hundred or so years. Nevertheless, he accurately predicted that Venus would cross the face of the Sun in both 1761 and 1769 - though he didn’t survive to see either.
  4. Inspired by Halley’s suggestion of a way to pin down the scale of the Solar System, teams of British and French astronomers set out on expeditions to places as diverse as India and Siberia. But things weren’t helped by Britain and France being at war. The person who deserves most sympathy is the French astronomer Guillaume Le Gentil.
    He was thwarted by the fact that the British were besieging his observation site at Pondicherry in India. Fleeing on a French warship crossing the Indian Ocean, Le Gentil saw a wonderful transit - but the ship’s pitching and rolling ruled out any attempt at making accurate observations. Undaunted, he remained south of the equator, keeping himself busy by studying the islands of Mauritius and Madagascar before setting off to observe the next transit in the Philippines. Ironically after travelling nearly 50,000 kilometres, his view was clouded out at the last moment, a very dispiriting experience.
  5. While the early transit timings were as precise as instruments would allow, the measurements were dogged by the ‘black drop’ effect. When Venus begins to cross the Sun’s disc, it looks smeared not circular - which makes it difficult to establish timings. This is due to diffraction of light. The second problem is that Venus exhibits a halo of light when it is seen just outside the Sun’s disc. While this showed astronomers that Venus was surrounded by a thick layer of gases refracting sunlight around it, both effects made it impossible to obtain accurate timings.
  6. But astronomers laboured hard to analyse the results of these expeditions to observe Venus transits. Johann Franz Encke, Director of the Berlin Observatory, finally determined a value for the AU based on all these parallax measurements: 153,340,000 km. Reasonably accurate for the time, that is quite close to today’s value of 149,597,870 km, determined by radar, which has now superseded transits and all other methods in accuracy. The AU is a cosmic measuring rod, and the basis of how we scale the Universe today. The parallax principle can be extended to measure the distances to the stars. If we look at a star in January - when Earth is at one point in its orbit - it will seem to be in a different position from where it appears six months later. Knowing the width of Earth’s orbit, the parallax shift lets astronomers calculate the distance.
  7. June 2004’s transit of Venus was thus more of an astronomical spectacle than a scientifically important event. But such transits have paved the way for what might prove to be one of the most vital breakthroughs in the cosmos - detecting Earth-sized planets orbiting other stars.








Venus in Transit IELTS Reading Passage Questions and Answers

Questions 1-7 

The reading passage has seven paragraphs: A – G.

Choose the most suitable paragraph headings A – G from the list of headings. 

Write the appropriate numbers (i –ix) in the text boxes below the headings. 

NB There are more paragraph headings than paragraphs so you will not use them all. 

  1. The Evolution of Stellar Parallax
  2. The planet Venus

  3. Halley's Plan to Measure the Sun's Distance

  4. Historic Venus Transit Captivates Global Audience

  5. The Solar System's size

  6. Challenges in Timing Venus Transit transits' significance 

  7. Transits' significance
  8. War between France and Britain

  9. Guillaume Le Gentil's Challenging Questix

  10. Edmond Halley's Discovery

1. Paragraph A

Answer: IV (Historic Venus Transit Captivates Global Audience)
Location: Paragraph A, Lines 1-4
Explanation: The paragraph describes the 2004 Venus transit, highlighting its significance as a global spectacle and referencing the 1882 transit.

2. Paragraph B

Answer: X (Edmond Halley's Discovery)
Location: Paragraph B, Lines 1-6
Explanation: This paragraph explains Edmond Halley’s observations and his proposal to measure the Sun’s distance using Venus transits.

3. Paragraph C

Answer: III (Halley's Plan to Measure the Sun's Distance)
Location: Paragraph C, Entire Paragraph
Explanation: The paragraph outlines Halley’s plan to use Venus’s parallax angle to calculate the astronomical unit (AU) and measure the Solar System's scale.

4. Paragraph D

Answer: IX (Guillaume Le Gentil's Challenging Quest)
Location: Paragraph D, Entire Paragraph
Explanation: The paragraph narrates Guillaume Le Gentil's struggles and misfortunes during his attempts to observe the Venus transits.

5. Paragraph E

Answer: VI (Challenges in Timing Venus Transit)
Location: Paragraph E, Entire Paragraph
Explanation: This paragraph discusses the difficulties caused by the "black drop" effect and Venus's halo in achieving precise transit timings.

6. Paragraph F

Answer: I (The Evolution of Stellar Parallax)
Location: Paragraph F, Entire Paragraph
Explanation: The paragraph explains how parallax principles were developed and refined using Venus transits, leading to more accurate astronomical measurements.

7. Paragraph G

Answer: VII (Transits' Significance)
Location: Paragraph G, Lines 1-4
Explanation: This paragraph emphasizes the broader importance of Venus transits in paving the way for detecting Earth-sized planets orbiting other stars.







Venus in Transit IELTS Reading Questions for Sentence Completion

Questions 8-13
Complete the sentences below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answer in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet. 

8. According to rumors, the teamwork of a few ________________ surpassed the experts in the precision of their findings.

Answer: schoolmistresses
Location: Paragraph A, Lines 3-4
Explanation: The text mentions that three schoolmistresses outperformed professional astronomers in their observations during the 1882 Venus transit.

9. _______________ realised that the time taken by a planet to go round the Sun depends on its distance from the Sun.

Answer: Johannes Kepler
Location: Paragraph C, Line 3
Explanation: The paragraph credits Kepler with discovering the relationship between a planet’s distance from the Sun and its orbital speed.

10. Halley couldn’t witness the transit of the planet _______________.

Answer: Venus
Location: Paragraph C, Line 7
Explanation: The passage states that Halley predicted Venus’s transits in 1761 and 1769 but did not live to witness them.

11. Le Gentil missed observing a second Venus transit in _______________.

Answer: Philippines
Location: Paragraph D, Line 8
Explanation: The text describes how Le Gentil’s view of the second transit was clouded out in the Philippines.

12. The shape of Venus appears distorted when it starts to pass in front of the Sun due to _______________ phenomenon.

Answer: black drop
Location: Paragraph E, Line 3
Explanation: The passage explains that the "black drop" effect causes Venus’s shape to appear smeared during transit.

13. The ________________ allows astronomers to work out how far away distant stars are from the Earth.

Answer: parallax principle
Location: Paragraph F, Lines 6-8
Explanation: The parallax principle, used during Venus transits, is highlighted as a method for calculating stellar distances.

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Tajkia Sultana

9 months ago

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Rahul Singha

9 months ago

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a year ago

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a year ago

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