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Tv tropes freefall
Tv tropes freefall













tv tropes freefall

The closest things possible that are capable of delivering a fast radiation kill in real life could be the Elephant's Foot in the early days of the Chernobyl disaster in 1986 (it has lost much lethality since) and Jupiter's moon Io, which has radiation levels measuring up to 3,600 rem/day due to being inside the planet's primary Van Allen radiation belt, but it would still take a few hours at least to kill a human. Not counting X-ray machines or medical radiation, it takes 50 rem to start developing tumors and a lethal dose is about 400 rem or 2 grays (that's about 5,000x greater than the normal background level). On average, people are exposed to about 81 mrem of radiation each year. No Real Life Examples, Please! This type of scenario is unlikely in real life and there have been no known cases of people dying from radiation on time scales of minutes or seconds. This is usually Hand Waved with radiation-measuring devices going Off the Scale, but short of some fantastic Toxic Phlebotinum at play, very little explanation is given as to how radiation can behave in such a lethal way not seen in reality. As soon as a character comes into contact with a short dose of radiation in a short period, they're dead. It doesn't matter how potent the concentration is or how large of an area it occupies most of the time. In fictionland, radiation suddenly has the potential to kill people in mere hours, minutes, or seconds, if not cause a flat-out instant death. At fastest, it would take one or two days to die from radiation greater than 3,000 rem or 30 grays. Sure, ionizing radiation is already deadly enough with its ability to destroy DNA on a molecular level and cause cancer and radiation sicknesses, but even in the most highly-concentrated areas, death by radiation is usually a slow burn that arises from complications of the human body undergoing life-threatening mutations. Hawkeye's mission and Ronin's secret plans will set them on a collision course that only one of them will walk away from.This trope covers any instances of radiation being far more fatal than it should be.After a clash with the Hood ends badly, Hawkeye gives himself a new mission that will place him in the crosshairs of one of New York's most dangerous villains. When a mysterious and ruthless new Ronin starts tearing a destructive path through the city, suspicion immediately falls on Hawkeye, but Clint has more to worry about than who’s wearing his old costume.Readers can find the full plot synopsis and solicitation details for Hawkeye: Freefall #1 below: It's been a blast seeing this book get built. just want to live in their world with them. It's a gorgeous book and I find myself more and more writing things that I just want to see Otto draw. He is the complete package - a great storyteller with a unique style, he can layout a page well, handle humor with ease, and makes action scenes feel alive. Otto is such a next level brilliant artist. So maybe the title Freefall can be seen as liberating? Or maybe he's just moving at top speed, out of control, and it's going to end badly. And this is his stepping out of his comfort zone, away from safety. The Freefall title speaks to an idea that Hawkeye lives his life on a tightrope, it's a careful balancing act. But the powers that be thought it left us open to a lot of cheap shots so HAWKEYE: FREEFALL came around. My original pitch was actually called HAWKEYE: IT'S NOT FUNNY ANYMORE which, ironically, I thought was very funny.















Tv tropes freefall