Is it possible to be frozen in carbonite




















Yunners , DarthBoba and Order66Survivor like this. Registered: Apr 26, Thrawn , Dec 16, I have the sleep paralysis from time to time. It terrifies me when it's just a few seconds. As for what Han said in the book, didn't Obi Wan in the book also mention that Owen was his brother? Maybe neither count as canon even if they're in the novel. Registered: Jun 29, Yeah, you really have to go line by line when it comes to the movie novels.

I mean-the ROTS novel was literally edited line by line by Lucas and even that doesn't wholly match what happens in the film. DarthBoba , Dec 16, Registered: Feb 5, The instance of Han awakening and Han describing being frozen seem different. When Han wakes up, he has no idea of where he is, and is unaware of his surroundings until hearing Jabba's familiar laugh. The point here is that he is only able to hear this once he's released.

Since the sandstorm is a deleted scene, I still consider it to be accurate, but it's still not clear how aware Han was. SlashMan , Dec 19, Thrawn , Dec 19, Registered: Dec 20, In the begin of Avatar the soldiers awake from a so called cryo-sleep, which is described as a bottle tequila and a beating. I think it's something like that. The Supreme Chancellor likes this. Registered: Dec 3, From what Ive read about Carbon Freezing it is a state of hibernation or a form of deep sleep.

Solo once stated that he was awake at times while being in the Carbonite. What this leads me to believe it is like being asleep. Occasionally regaining consciousness and then falling asleep again. Felicia , Dec 20, Registered: Dec 13, I think it would be like this: Imagine you closing your eyes and never opening them and you feel stone all around you. Improve this answer. Valorum k gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Donmax Donmax 6, 8 8 gold badges 39 39 silver badges 75 75 bronze badges.

A footnote in the new canon novelisation of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi offers the following information: Before the invention of the hyperdrive, some space travelers used carbonite to endure long voyages. Since a common side effect was death, Solo is lucky to have only exhaustion, weakness, dehydration, dizziness, memory loss, and blindness Return of the Jedi: Beware the Power of the Dark Side!

Community Bot 1. Valorum Valorum k gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Myles Anderson Myles Anderson 1 1 gold badge 1 1 silver badge 5 5 bronze badges. And how do you know all of this? Was this explained in a book? First hand experience? Some sources vaguely imply, that person is not frozen in carbonite like in ice, there is no actual freezing sub-zero temperature etc. Other sources say carbonite can slow down body functions dramaticly. Bottom line — canon is very vague in this I think : — Delltar.

Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Upcoming Events. The carbonite chamber fills with clouds of thick, white vapor as Han Solo, his face scrunched up in anxious anticipation, disappears in the carbonite gas.

And while the feelings we feel during that famous scene are real, carbonite freezing is currently not. But what if it were? Could our hero survive the freezing process? And if so, could he be successfully thawed? We spoke to cryonics expert Ben Best to find out. Much like carbonite freezing, cryopreservation involves cooling a body from the outside.

Unlike carbonite freezing, though, cryopreservation is a gradual process, involving some very specific precautions meant to help protect the sensitive tissues of the human body against the harm that can occur during freezing.



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