LoT: YES! Please let the Hawkman stay dead, pretty please with a cherry on top. Also these people SUCK at doing anything low key.
The 100: !!! Monty's mom! LEXA! My brain has gone all Keanu.
Jayne ,'Safe'
A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Marvel superheroes are discussed over at the MCU thread.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
LoT: YES! Please let the Hawkman stay dead, pretty please with a cherry on top. Also these people SUCK at doing anything low key.
The 100: !!! Monty's mom! LEXA! My brain has gone all Keanu.
I wish they could lose Hawkman somehow.
I wish for a million dollars. </Willow>
(Seriously, this is, like, the first time the TV PTB have ever granted me a wish.)
It's a shame they couldn't have Damien Darkh kill Vandal Savage and take over as the immortal villain.
Stein: Alpha particles are highly trackable.
Ray: Yet unheard of in the 1970's.
Me: [head explodes]
The alpha particle stuff was taking me right out of the story. They were discovered by Ernest Rutherford in 1899(!)(at ita's alma mater, btw). Won him a Nobel prize. One of his students, Hans Geiger, developed a way of detecting them, the Geiger counter, invented in 1928. Rutherford is one of the most famous physicists ever (they even named an element after him). No way Stein or Ray don't know that, and even Jax and Mick have probably heard of Geiger counters.
edit: Also, alpha particles are radioactivity. If Ray's suit is actively emitting them it's no wonder nobody's heard of him in the future. He's gonna die young (and glowing).
Saw the first 1.5 episodes of Legends of Tomorrow last night. I enjoyed the incongruity of "Love Will Keep Us Together" and the bar fight, although a jukebox in that type of bar would more likely have been playing Bad Company. Or maybe "Free Bird."
Stein: Alpha particles are highly trackable.
Ray: Yet unheard of in the 1970's.
I think tv writers make things up and think they made them up. "Okay, let's call this macguffin...uh...what's a Greek letter? Alpha? That sounds science-y. We'll call it an alpha particle!"
Alpha particles aren't highly trackable. They can be shielded by a piece of paper, or by a short distance of air.
It's gamma rays that have a lot of penetrating power, isn't it? Though I don't see how those would leave a residue you could track, they'd either be absorbed by nearby matter or expanding at lightspeed from the source point.
Tom and Matt are right. Geiger counters need to be, like, a centimeter away from the source to see alpha particles. Beta particles (which are basically electrons or positrons) can penetrate further, with gamma rays being the most able to penetrate (since they are high energy light waves).
For betas and gammas there would be a trail of ionized molecules as they were absorbed by nearby matter, and gammas you could detect with something that sees light at that frequency. Speed of light shouldn't matter because the source would be constant, like it doesn't matter when you see a flashlight in a dark room.
They should've just gone with tachyons.
Interesting factoid I teach my students. PET (positron emission tomography) scanners work by feeding a patient a radioactive isotope that produces positron beta particles as it decays. Positrons are antimatter electrons, so as soon as runs into a normal electron (like instantly) they annihilate themselves and the electrons producing energy in the form of gamma rays inside the body of the patient that a detector outside the body can track to provide diagnostic info. There is no word on whether the side effects of PET scans include anger management issues and a greenish tinge to the skin.
Thanks, I didn't realize gamma rays left ionized atoms in their wake.
DH and I both gasped when Waller got it. Did NOT see that coming. Thought there were some lovely scenes with Oliver and Felicity. Stephen Amell gives good Love-eyes.
I love it when y'all get all sciencey.