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Project D.E - Comic Part 1 - (Page 126)
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GTHusky
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Project D.E - Comic Part 1 - (Page 127)

Project D.E - Comic Part 1 - (Page 129)

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by GTHusky
Project D.E - Comic Part 1 - (Page 126)
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Project D.E - Comic Part 1 - (Page 129)
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Biological life forms are not meant to live outside the ecosystem they've evolved in. Space is hostile. It's not built for life. It's scary to think that a thin layer of fabric, no matter if it's "highly advanced alien tech", is the only thing keeping you from insta-freezing, getting blasted by radiation and micro-particles that can pierce through your DNA. A thin dome of glass-like material, keeping that precious oxygen from escaping your lungs. Just one mistake could end your life in seconds...

Husky seems very scared of these things. And he's right to be. All it takes is a mistake and a life time of complacency, ignoring how precarious a day-to-day activity can really be. I mean, we do it all the time, when we drive our 3000lb vehicles at 60 to 110 kilometers per hour every day. When we travel thousands of meters above ground in our gigantic metallic flying machines, and countless other activities that could end us in a blink of an eye.

Trying different things with this page. I am happy with how it turned out. I guess it's time to reveal why Husky is so insecure about being out in space.

Characters, art and story by me. No A.I here. Only 20 years of practice, experimenting and honing my own style and skill. Thank you for supporting your digital and traditional artists/illustrators, regardless of their skill level.

Keywords
male 1,255,972, canine 204,050, comic 94,076, husky 30,745, alien 24,874, space 8,189, sci-fi 4,855, siberian husky 2,299, spaceship 1,337, alien dog 444, zero gravity 126
Details
Type: Picture/Pinup
Published: 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Rating: General

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17 comments

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furryme7
2 months, 2 weeks ago
Thank you for continuing to create real art instead of fake generated slop.
ShySketch
2 months, 2 weeks ago
too much political/religious narrative.
GTHusky
2 months, 2 weeks ago
Huh?
ShySketch
2 months, 1 week ago
the moon is made of crumbly swiss cheese, top right, but it's not over it's bigger than ever before~ x3
it's in hypothetical rules that put to death, and the ship's door is wide open

also i like the aesthetics, reminds me of Star Wars BFII on Xbox in the space maps with the big ships with the hangars of small ships you could fly to board the enemy ship or to attack their exterior
bearwithin
2 months, 1 week ago
The only explanation I can think of is that this comment was accidentally posted on the wrong page! Like when you say "Oooh nice cock!" But you accidentally send it to your work group chat instead of your private friend chat. 😝
GTHusky
2 months, 1 week ago
LOL
esanhusky
2 months, 2 weeks ago
Totally downvote that lat comment, I love seeing the motivations of the characters, and I also like seeing your motivations behind the characters!
GTHusky
2 months, 2 weeks ago
Thank you so much. Yeah, I have no idea what this dude above me is talking about XD
ShySketch
2 months, 1 week ago
See them yes, read them no x3

"show not tell" it does good enough without the text in that panel, which is my favorite panel of this page.
Sappy
2 months, 1 week ago
Not the short leash!
esanhusky
2 months, 1 week ago
Never put a husky on a short leash!
bearwithin
2 months, 1 week ago
Ooo, more back story! I guess we're about to find out one reason why Husky is nervous, and I have to say, I'm nervous!
ShySketch
2 months, 1 week ago
Exactly what I was referring to.
moyomongoose
2 months, 1 week ago
A space suit doesn't have to be very thick.  

The pressure of the atmosphere on Earth at sea level is only 14.7 psi.  Thus, in the vacuum of outer space, there is only approximately 14 psi pressure differential between inside and outside the space suit.  That's the same pressure differential between Earth's atmosphere at sea level and that of an automobile tire halfway to going flat...or approximate radiator pressure of an average automobile (at a pressure providing the cap is not removed while hot and causing explosive flash evaporation).

I just now found on Google, the highest altitude/elevation some folks can go without additional breathing gear is 18,000 feet, atmospheric pressure being 7.35 psi. Beyond 18,000 feet up, breathing gear is necessary.
At 5 miles up, you could still get by with only additional breathing gear. However, at 40,000 feet, a space suit is necessary to prevent lung damage.  Atmospheric pressure at 5 miles is 4.1 psi.  At 40,000 feet (approx 7.6 miles), it is 2.7 psi.
At 63,000 feet (approx 12 miles) without a space suit, moisture in the lungs will boil at body temperature resulting in immediate death.  This is called the Armstrong limit, pressure being 0.818 psi.

A small puncture in a space suit would still be fatal.  Although 14 psi can be pinched shut with the fingers, depressurization would begin at a rapid enough rate for the astronaut to immediately loose consciousness.  Survival in that scenario would depend on another crew member noticing the puncture in time to prevent further pressure loss.
ShySketch
2 months, 1 week ago
In that case, the space suit should be inflated like a bag of chips brought into an airplane since it would be pressurized compared to the external environment.

You're thinking hypothetical, you should be thinking scuba diving.  Come up too fast and you get the bends.  We have this organ on our bodies called "skin" and it's you know... uh... contained?  The issue is the air in your blood expanding to form bubbles, not getting sucked through a tiny hole in your own skin or the wetsuit.  Furthermore, the door of the ship should be closed if they're doing maintenance and aren't involved in some kind of Star Wars BF II space battle where they need the doors open to launch ships

If you've ever had an almost-empty can of spraypaint, you can stomp it to reduce the volume inside the can and increase the internal pressure to get more paint out.  It's obviously significantly more difficult to stomp a full can.  The "hole" (the cap, where the paint comes out) reduces the pressure not all at once.  There is a limit to how fast it can come out, depending on the size of the "puncture."  Fluid dynamics!

re-REET~
moyomongoose
2 months, 1 week ago
Actually if you've noticed the video footage of the Apolo moon missions, the space suits do look a bit puffy.

A sudden loss of air pressure in a space suit would have the same effect as coming up too fast while scuba diving.  Both are too sudden of a pressure drop.
ShySketch
2 months, 1 week ago
(noobtube)?v=9HQfauGJaTs

You're speaking in hypotheticals, the paint can's interior pressure doesn't become equal to the external pressure because you pressed the cap to paint a line.  You can also punch a hole into the can to make a quick, messy fill like J. Polluck drippin' paint.  It does not instantaneously become equal to external pressure, it depends on the size of the hole and the interior pressure and the material it's contained in.

It's hard to have any idea what I'm supposed to come away with from these moon missions.  I think if they made everyone face the wall and threatened them and made them to recite a specific narrative, that would probably be more effective than playing this mindreading game where I gotta read the mind of some filmographer from half a century ago.  I am also expected to Say a completely different, nonobservable ruleset of Star Wars physics.
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