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+-SH safe2286416 +-SH rainbow dash291804 +-SH g42127789 +-SH 20% cooler575 +-SH cooler394 +-SH cooler (dbz)27 +-SH crossover75856 +-SH dragon ball3483 +-SH dragon ball z2210 +-SH dragonball z abridged532 +-SH play on words14 +-SH ponified54568 +-SH pun9252 +-SH rainbowcooler10 +-SH team four star192
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this is just COLD
:D
![](/images/tagblocked-7b05ae50e1f6b0f784fc7d2200ce2bd8.svg?vsn=d)
your current filter.SCIENCE!
@Dustcan
Boiling point of N2: -196C / 77K
Boiling point of LH2: -253C / 20K
Boiling point of Helium: -269C / 4.2K
Afaik, nothing is colder than liquid helium (lower boiling point) - but liquid hydrogen is way colder than liquid nitrogen.
It was a liquid helium leak that set the Large Hadron Collider back. ^[1] News sources called it an “explosion” - which it was, but it was an interesting kind of one… An explosion is a rapid expansion of gasses blasting outward with a great deal of force. Heat actually isn’t a requirement. Just see what happens if you whack a SCUBA tank open. BAM. But normally explosions are driven by heat - if you suddenly heat a small pocket of air a huge amount, it will want to expand, so it will - very rapidly. Kaboom. But in this case, it wasn’t some normal material suddenly being heated to thousands of degrees to expand outwards - it was liquid helium being heated to room temperature, but the temperature difference was just as great as any explosion, so an explosion it was - “with sufficient force to break [nearby] 10-ton magnets [] from their mountings.”
Here’s a fun thing,
Ideal gas law: PV = nRT. Let’s fix V and n as constants, and ignore constants since we’re doing a rational comparison (you can ignore coefficients in this type of analysis). This is equivalent to saying, we’re going to hold the volume and the amount of material the same, and watch to see how the pressure varies in response to varying the temperature.*
P = T
14.7 psi = ~4K = 1 atmosphere
Room temperature is ~293K. So we have to multiply the whole equation by 293/4 = ~73 to get the right pressure.
1,073 psi = 293K = 73 atmospheres.
That’s the same explosive force as heating room temperature air (293K * 73) to 21,389K, or 21,096C, or 38,005*F.
The force could be up to 4x or 8x greater or so if they were running it even colder, which was probably the case since it was a coolant (it needed to take on some heat without boiling, so you need some room before hitting boiling point).
That’s the coolest.
What about liquid Nitrogen?
…But of those two, I guess it’d depend on bodily metabolism.
But I’d say Dash.
No, that would be her father…
@anonymous-pony
That would be Abridged 16’s most badass line
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Edited because: 2short
What we really need is a comparison between two Rainbow Dashes to see which one of those are cooler.
She must be ice cold!
Rainbow Dash is %20 of Cooler. These parameters… are acceptable.