Hi lsattesttaker93!
I'd be happy to answer the questions about answer choice (E).
Isn't E just too strong of a statement to make? Or is this supported because of the last sentence where it is relative: "The less frequently cabin air is replenished in a plane in flight, the higher the level of carbon dioxide in that plane and the easier it is for airborne illnesses to be spread."?
Yes, answer choice (E) is supported by that last sentence, and it isn't too strong of a statement. The stimulus gives us conditional reasoning:
LFRR More CO2
A less frequent replenish rate implies more CO2. In addition, we're given the sufficient condition in this conditional reasoning--"Since then the rate has been once every hour." Given that the preceding sentence mentions that the rate had been every 30 minutes, we know that this once-every-hour rate is a less frequent replenish rate. In other words, we have LFRR and the above conditional reasoning reflects that if we have LFRR we can infer More CO2.
This is what answer choice (E) reflects: "In 1980 the level of carbon dioxide in the cabin air on a two-hour commercial airline flight was lower than it is today on a similar flight." Today we have LFRR, which implies More CO2.
We don't know other things like whether or not technologies have evolved and bringing them in is unnecessary and can detract from the correct answer. One might also speculate--what if there were much more CO2 overall back in 1980, and less today when there is a less frequent replenish rate? Here again speculation can detract from the right answer, since this is a must be true question. Consequently, it's essential to stay only within what is permitted by the statements we are given. And those statements include one that is unequivocal: "The less frequently cabin air is replenished in a plane in flight, the higher the level of carbon dioxide."
The "similar" in the last sentence feels like it protects the answer choice around questions about the flight itself
Yes, I agree that the "similar flight" language functions to protect the answer choice. Without that, there might be a risk that a new variable is being introduced, namely, a different aircraft. Instead of that, the answer choice seems phrased so as to affirm that the newer flight is otherwise "similar."