Step 1: Understanding the Concept:
This question is about the practical application of thermal expansion and contraction of solids. Most materials, especially metals, expand when heated and contract when cooled. This principle is used by blacksmiths to fit metal parts tightly.
Step 2: Detailed Explanation:
First Action: To fit a metal rim onto a wooden wheel, the rim is intentionally made with a slightly smaller inner diameter than the outer diameter of the wheel. To make it fit, the rim's diameter must be increased. This is achieved by uniformly heating the metal rim. Heating causes the metal to expand. So, the first blank is Heated.
Second Action: While the rim is expanded due to the heat, it is quickly placed over the wooden wheel. As the rim cools down to room temperature, it starts to contract or shrink. So, the second blank is cooled.
The Principle: The reason this process creates a very tight fit is that as the metal rim cools, it attempts to return to its original smaller size, exerting a large compressive force on the wooden wheel. This phenomenon is called thermal contraction. The statement that explains why this works is the metal shrinks as it cools.
Combining these parts, the full statement is: "the metal rim is Heated and placed on the wooden wheel and cooled. This process works because the metal shrinks as it cools". This matches option (C).