
Now lets see if DA/FA resizes this due to it's width or not.
Dragonrift gets some bloaties! Course, we a good cushion of air against debris should help. Lots of junk in space these days!
Now this pic had a couple of technical issues. One I had a brain slip and saved it as the wrong format.. then my tablet decided to refuse to respond to pressure in oC. Argh! But here it is! Hope you like :)
Dragonrift gets some bloaties! Course, we a good cushion of air against debris should help. Lots of junk in space these days!
Now this pic had a couple of technical issues. One I had a brain slip and saved it as the wrong format.. then my tablet decided to refuse to respond to pressure in oC. Argh! But here it is! Hope you like :)
Category Artwork (Digital) / Inflation
Species Western Dragon
Size 1280 x 623px
File Size 146.4 kB
lol did you know that if you throw someone in the space this one will inflate and pop real fast? this is because the preasure inside the body is higher that the presure of the vaccuum, the law of compensation in physics says that what is too cold tend to get hotter to be on the same temperature as the feild around it, it also applyes to the pressure, in the vaccuum the oposite effect of baing submerged too deep occours. Whenn in deep water, the vast amount of water along with the proximity to the gravity center cause the pressure to rise proportionally so all that preassure make it a high preassure field and any body whose preasure is inferior to the one around will cause all the amount of water to press into the body of lower preasure to compensate, so it is crushed, just because submarines couldn't go that deep when they were constructed. And the reverse of this situation cause the body to inflate drastically as the preasure inside the body forces its way into the field spreading around as well as the body in question if it isn't strong enough to hold its preasure inside it.
Now...why i'm saying this? X3 of course everyone know that XD
Now...why i'm saying this? X3 of course everyone know that XD
Well, the theory is indeed feasible for the cartoon/movie world, unfortunately in real life, no "splodey-reaction" would happen. Famous suit-decompression scenes like the ones in "Superman II" and "Outland" are sadly over-exaggerated. Sure, I think they're great for the imaginative world, and it sparks alot of entertaining potential with inflation art, so don't think I'm against it any way at all! ^__^
But yeah, it has been proven on several occasions in the past that explosive decompression is only that "explosive" when an extreme level of pressure is almost completely eclipsed by a vaccuum in a very short amount of time. A rupture in the ship's hull or a tear in your spacesuit is a more gradual effect. Chances are very high that your body's structure won't change.
Pity, I know. *chuckles*
But yeah, it has been proven on several occasions in the past that explosive decompression is only that "explosive" when an extreme level of pressure is almost completely eclipsed by a vaccuum in a very short amount of time. A rupture in the ship's hull or a tear in your spacesuit is a more gradual effect. Chances are very high that your body's structure won't change.
Pity, I know. *chuckles*
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