I'm not sure that comment in the last panel should be in the future tense. If she's not breathing a heliox mixture, she can and will suffocate. Rather, I'd have it read "No, she's not.", and imagine a voiceover from the TF2 Medic speaking that comment.
I'm not sure that comment in the last panel should be in the future tense. If she's not breathing a heliox mixture, she can and will suffocate. Rather, I'd have it read "No, she's not.", and imagine a voiceover from the TF2 Medic speaking that comment.
It's a shortened form of 彼女はヘリウムを吸っても死にません。 ->She won't die from breathing helium. I just preserved tense.
Then again, does it really matter? The end meaning is the same.
^ This was brought up in the forums. The artist names are being updated.
The speed of sound becomes faster when using helium because helium is less dense than air. Thus, the frequency goes up. You see, the human ear doesn't use wavelength to sense pitch, but uses frequency. So, it sounds like your voice gets a higher pitch after breathing helium.Our last experiment for today explains why breathing helium changes your voice.※She won't die from this.That's awfully boring for the last experiment.Ughh......!?She's dead......HeliumHelium is inert against the human body. However, without putting in oxygen, the body may suffocate. Chiyuri, are you okay?