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Dimension 5 Transdimensional Rar File: Tips and Tricks for Finding and Playing the Rare and Sought-A



Gerald "Jerry" Smith, Sr. (voiced by Chris Parnell[1]) is Summer and Morty's insecure 34-year-old father, Beth's husband, and Rick's son-in-law, who strongly disapproves of Rick's influence over his family. Jerry used to work at a low-level advertising agency until he was fired for incompetence. Generally insecure, he is frequently led into conflicts stemming from opportunistic posturing, while his marriage is sometimes jeopardized by his wife's reactions to his poor relationship with Rick. Beth views Jerry as meek under his boasts, ultimately fearful of confrontation. However, it is strongly suggested that in spite of their problems, they are emotionally codependent. The episode "Mortynight Run" reveals that one of the Ricks, keenly aware that every Jerry is incapable of surviving off of Earth, created a daycare where every Jerry is dropped off by their Rick and Morty during adventures should he attempt to accompany them; in "Solaricks", it is revealed that Jerry was switched in the Jerryboree, with the main character Jerry of the series having been introduced in "Mortynight Run". It is revealed in the same episode that in some dimensions, Beth has left Jerry and remarried. By the end of "The Wedding Squanchers", having attempted to talk his family into selling Rick out, Jerry becomes the only member of the family to benefit from the Earth joining the Galactic Federation. After the federation collapses, Jerry puts his foot down and tells Beth it is him or Rick, but Beth chooses her father and tells Rick that she and Jerry are getting a divorce. Rick later claims to Morty in a rant that he planned this because Jerry had planned to betray him. As Jerry leaves, Summer ignores him and Rick waits for him to leave. Summer comes to terms with the separation and reconciles with him. In "The Rickchurian Mortydate", Jerry and Beth reconnect and she calls off the divorce, and they later establish a throuple with Beth's clone, Space Beth.


Summer Smith (voiced by Spencer Grammer[1]) is Morty's 17-year-old (18 after season 5) older sister, a more conventional and often superficial teenager, who is obsessed with improving her status among her peers. Summer is generally similar to her mother, and she is often shown to be very smart and humorous, but she has also shown elements of Jerry's approval-seeking. She occasionally expresses jealousy that Morty gets to accompany Rick on his inter-dimensional adventures. In the second season, she accompanies Rick and Morty on adventures more frequently and sometimes will even prove herself to be more competent than Morty, especially when emotional nuance is required. Summer has, on occasion, been shown to think similarly to Rick, such as quickly figuring out a way to save herself and Rick from execution and correctly deducing that dead flies in Rick's garage were more than they appeared. Summer cares about Rick and sees him as a hero, though he is often contemptuous and dismissive of her teenaged life perspective and values. In "The Rickshank Rickdemption", she is the only member of the family who wants to rescue Rick, despite the pleas of her brother that Rick is nothing more than a selfish jerk. When their parents agree on a divorce, Summer begins resenting her father and starts showing her dark side until she reconciles with him.




Dimension 5 Transdimensional Rar File



The Prime Smith family, consisting of Jerry, Beth, and Summer (voiced by Parnell, Chalke, and Grammer), were the main characters when Rick and Morty began, and as such were identical to the "current" Smith family. In "Rick Potion #9", they are left behind as Rick C-137 takes Morty to a new dimension to live after he irreparably turns everyone besides them into "Cronenbergs". By the time Morty Prime and the Summer return to his original dimension in the season 3 premiere, "The Rickshank Rickdemption", the sanity of the original Smiths seems to have eroded, as they attempt to kill Summer and hold Morty captive because of their association with Rick. On thawing out, having regained a semblance of sanity in the comic arc "Look Who's Cronenberging Now", Summer Prime sacrifices herself to stop the plans of an invading Coalition of Ricks. In the season 5 finale, Beth Prime is briefly seen in a Rick's 'crybaby backstory' as he crashes into their garage in his ship; in the season 6 premiere, "Solaricks", it is revealed that Beth Prime has also since died, leaving Jerry (now dubbed Apocalypse Jerry) alone. Having regained his humanity, Jerry spent his days reading and scavenging, rejecting Morty on his brief return and berating him for "leaving us to freeze", their residual injuries from having been frozen having been what led to Summer's sacrifice play (attributed to not having "thawed right") and Beth's death, until being killed by Rick Prime: the original Rick of the reality, with Rick C-137 having initially elected to live with the Prime Smith family and surrounding timelines out of a wish to track down Prime and kill him for having killed C-137's Diane and Beth (the latter as a child).


Different versions of the main characters inhabit other realities and dimensions. Other Ricks are mostly similar to the "main" Rick, though some have unique features which set them apart. Most other Mortys seen in the show are far more timid and weak-willed than the main Morty, an exception being "President Morty". They are all voiced by Justin Roiland.


Technically referred to as dimensional transcendence, an unusual fact of some architecture in fiction is that no matter how small it is on the outside, on the inside it can be any size it darned well pleases. Finding such a place couldn't be simpler. All you have to do is walk into an ordinary 1960s London police call box and you're in a space that dwarfs most Gothic cathedrals.


Discrimination between VOC-metabolite profiles of green ash sapwood cores with different levels of EAB infestation. Three-dimensional factor analysis of e-nose aroma classes by: (A) Principal component analysis (PCA) between uninfested (healthy) sapwood and EAB-infested sapwood; (B) discriminant factor analysis (DFA) between sapwood cores from different tree crown health classes corresponding to various levels of EAB sapwood infestation. The Discrimination Index (DI) value for 3-d PCA was statistically valid at P


The 3-d DFA data plot, comparing data clusters of VOC e-nose smellprint signatures from volatile metabolites derived from cores of the four EAB-decline sample types (in various stages of EAB larval-infestation or subgroups), provided a means for visually indicating differences in chemical relatedness between VOC-metabolite mixtures derived from sapwood headspace volatiles for each e-nose aroma class or sample type (Figure 1B). Data clusters representing VOC-metabolites from sapwood sample types with different levels of EAB-larval infestation were well separated in 3-dimensional space with no overlaps between data clusters. Again, there was a single outlier data point for one of the sapwood cores from the heavily infested sample type. The data cluster of the uninfested (healthy, represented by green squares) sample type was the smallest and tightest (least variable) cluster among the four sample types. The most widely dispersed and largest data cluster occurred with the light EAB-infestation sample type (cyan-colored triangles), whereas data clusters of the moderate (magenta-colored triangles) and heavily infested (red triangles) sapwood were intermediate in size and spatial distribution. The breakdown of total variance percentages, accounting for data variability explained by each orthogonal principal component in the DFA, are as follows: DF 1 = 88.93%; DF 2 = 8.60%; and DF 3 = 2.48%. Consequently, the majority of the variability in the DFA was accounted for by DF 1 (x-axis), whereas DF 2 (y-axis) and DF 3 (z-axis) accounted for only minor proportions of the total variance.


A comparison of combined smellprint signatures resulting from simultaneous analysis of VOC metabolites from sapwood cores of trees from all four crown class ratings (different aroma classes) yielded a VOC smellprint profile showing more clearly the differences in sensor-response intensities of individual sensors in the array for all EAB-decline sample types (Figure 3). The most obvious difference in smellprint signatures between samples types is the abundance of sensor responses to VOC-metabolites from healthy tree cores (green bars) that are absent in EAB-infested trees. Twelve separate sensors responded only to volatiles from healthy tree sapwood cores, whereas only two sensors, including sensor S-14 (1481.31-1-H) and sensor S-29 (518.20-2-H), responded only to VOCs from EAB-infested sapwood cores and had no responses to VOCs from healthy sapwood cores.


Analysis of VOC-emission profiles from sapwood cores of all four decline classes, previously defined as an FIA ash-crown condition rating scale modified by Smith [38,39], by DFA showed that the chemical composition of VOC emissions was significantly different for the four sample types. VOC-emissions from healthy cores formed a tight data cluster, whereas the data clusters for the three decline classes (with different levels of EAB-infestation) were separate, but more diffuse. Pairwise comparisons of data clusters between all four decline classes showed high levels of differences in chemical relatedness between VOC emissions as confirmed by PDI values > 90% differences between all combinations of decline sample types. 2ff7e9595c


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