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Engineer of the Electro-mechanical, Maintainer of spreadsheets, Writer of code & Reader of webnovels. Native English Speaker willing to edit/proofread, part-time.
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Y' think we're a Joke?
Careful, those guns are sharp!
Correct for the most part. Sound waves are composed of both potential energy and kinetic energy. but in air and other gasses what we mostly experience is the kinetic energy(think billiard balls). With sounds traveling through liquids and solids potential energy is more visible (think ball pit)
Author, I am sorry but this situation is very lazy and contrived; you could have done much better than a random habit of saying "status". Here are example that would work better: Example 1: He is in an AI course, right? well, the teacher could ask the students something to the effect of "What's the status on your mid-term projects? ", to which the spaced out MC mutters under his breath "status?"... then *Ding* Example 2: When he is on his social media and sees that someone changed their relationship status. or better yet, his girlfriend dumps him via a status change.
Or at least, now after you took the quest and murdered him isn't when you should think about this... try doing it before next time.
Obviously, the bullet bounced off his lvl 10 eyeball. He'll be fine,... probably...
slime=ballistic jel?
or perhaps penguin?
Are you saying or asking?
he could have at least used it to do his homework.
but it depends on the glasses...
it can as seen below:
Yes, a tidally locked planet would very much be like you are describing, blazing hot desert on one side, dark frozen desert on the other. In theory there could still be a habitable zone on such a planet in the ring that is perpetually in twilight. The planet Verces in Paizo's StarFinders ttrpg universe is one such example. As for a planet exploding due to irregular heating and cooling, I am not sure how severe the difference would need to be for that to be a factor. On a planet with a long day/night cycle, say as long as an earth year, the hot and cold sides would be slowly replacing each other constantly. I Imagine any creatures on such a planet would be highly migratory to stay within their preferred habitat. though that also raises questions on how plant life would survive, is it just dormant most of the time? is it also migratory? And how would the weather be like in the transition area? You have a set of continent-sized moving hot and cold air masses, my guess would be near constant supercell thunderstorms...⛈️
I hadn't considered that. We have an example of this in our own solar system; Uranus' axis is horizontal.
Vanilla Ice Baby dragon