User talk:Alexdhamp

Hello Alexdhamp, greetings and welcome to the Narutopedia! Thanks for your edit to the Infobox talk:Sasuke Uchiha page.

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Please leave a message on my talk page if I can help with anything! -- ShounenSuki (Talk) 23:20, 2010 July 6

Re: Matter and Vacuums
Your diagram isn't exactly how air compressors work, actually. An air compressor consists of a tank with a piston inside. The piston compresses the air, creating a vacuum above it. The vacuum is filled with new air through a valve. Then the piston moves up again, compressing the air above it, closing the valve and forcing the now-compressed air into the area below the piston through other valves. Then the whole process is repeated until enough air has been compressed.

So at no point in time is a vacuum created which magically sucks in air until it is of higher pressure than the surrounding area. Also, a vacuum is, by definition, absence of matter. You can put a piece of solid matter into the vacuum, but then the vacuum would just get smaller. The part with the matter would no longer be a vacuum. Space is a vacuum, Earth isn't. —ShounenSuki (talk 11:47, June 5, 2011 (UTC)


 * Personally, I always saw the Hakke Kūshō as working similar to how a pistol shrimp attacks. The pistol shrimp creates a sonic blast which forms a near-vacuum bubble that is shot at the shrimp's victim, stunning or even killing it. These bubbles can have speeds of up to 100 km/h and the sound they make can reach over 200 dB, making the shrimp one of the loudest animals in the sea, together with sperm whales and the like. When the bubbles collapse, they generate temperatures of almost 5000°C, similar to the surface of the Sun. Which makes me wonder why people think Amaterasu's temperature is ridiculously impossible... —ShounenSuki (talk 23:39, June 5, 2011 (UTC)

Talk page commenting
When commenting on talk pages, it's good practice to make the comments at the bottom of the section it pertains to, since it keeps things ordered chronologically. Omnibender - Talk - Contributions 23:25, June 6, 2011 (UTC)