RandyColins
rating: 0+x

Re: How Many [DATA EXPUNGED]

As you may have noticed, we have begun changing the lightbulbs in the east wing. The maintenance staff would like you to know that the procedure is delicate, stressful, and done in a manner necessary to ensure the safety of all onsite personnel. Please be respectful while they are carrying out their duties.

Remember that we are an EEOC compliant organization, and any potentially disparaging remarks regarding ethnicity or physical characteristics will be dealt with by HR.

Thank you, and have a safe workweek.

  • Clinical Tone Engaage!
    • Some people reported feeling a "heat wave" during a criticality event.[43][44] It is not known whether this may be a psychosomatic reaction to the realization of what has just occurred (i.e. the high probability of inevitable impending death from a fatal radiation dose), or if it is a physical effect of heating (or non-thermal stimulation of heat sensing nerves in the skin) due to radiation emitted by the criticality event. A review of all of the criticality accidents with eyewitness accounts indicates that the heat waves were only observed when the fluorescent blue glow (the non-Cherenkov light, see above) was also observed. This would suggest a possible relationship between the two, and indeed, one can be potentially identified. In dense air, over 30% of the emission lines from nitrogen and oxygen are in the ultraviolet range, and about 45% are in the infrared range. Only about 25% are in the visible range. Since the skin feels light (visible or otherwise) through its heating of the skin surface, it is possible that this phenomenon can explain the heat wave perceptions.[45] However, this explanation has not been confirmed and may be inconsistent with the intensity of light reported by witnesses compared to the intensity of heat perceived. Further research is hindered by the small amount of data available from the few instances where humans have witnessed these incidents and survived long enough to provide a detailed account of their experiences and observations.