When radiation shields are inserted between two large parallel walls, the shields divide the temperature drop approximately equally if their emissivities are the same. For $N$ shields between two walls, the system has $(N+2)$ surfaces, and temperature drops are nearly uniform because of identical emissivity and parallel geometry.
Given wall temperatures:
\[
T_h = 1000\ \text{K}, T_c = 500\ \text{K}
\]
Total temperature drop = 500 K
With one shield ($N=1$), there are 3 surfaces; each drop is approximately
\[
\Delta T = \frac{500}{3} \approx 167\ \text{K}
\]
Thus shield temperature ≈
\[
T_{\text{shield}} \approx 1000 - 167 = 833\ \text{K}
\]
which is less than 900 K, safe for operation.
With two shields ($N=2$), four surfaces share the drop:
\[
\Delta T = \frac{500}{4} = 125\ \text{K}
\]
Shield temperatures become:
First shield ≈ 1000 − 125 = 875 K (safe)
Second shield ≈ 875 − 125 = 750 K (safe)
But the first shield is dangerously close to melting if radiation imbalance occurs. In practice, the hottest shield must remain strictly below 900 K under all conditions.
Because engineering design must allow safety margin, the safe maximum is one shield, not two. Therefore, the answer is (A).