Interested in advertising on Derpibooru? Click here for information!

Help fund the $15 daily operational cost of Derpibooru - support us financially!
Description
“You’re gonna miss me when I’m gone”You know, I feel a bit akward for that I draw Delta Vee too often. Well because thats not my OC at all, but she gives me back something. Feeling of… Beautiful? I just like how Delta looks and I feel in her some “half-life” vibes as.. her name at example. Delta Vee = Half-Life.All this like terms from science and they are nicely fits into characters. And her hair, and her cold view with burning red eyes and etc. Messy hair that shows she don’t care about her self - only for science. So yeah. I do what I like to. Expressing my feelings… that what art all about right?…Also, its not winter or christmas night in the background. It’s spring.
I think I wrote here the weird sentence, so here comes some semantics from me then.
By “Delta Vee = Half-life” I mean that I want to say these both are formulas from physics/chemistry and that they are connected with main plot of the story.
As character Delta Vee connected with rocket science, so here’s her name is Delta Vee that actually mean term Delta-V ( ∆v ) from the…. rocket science.
And half-life as a game that connected with the main story and with game’s setting and it’s also real term from nuclear physics “Half-Life” ( λ ).
By few words: I mean that name of character/game are directly connected with main setting of the stories. Not that they are equivalents by science terms.
Edited
The Greek letter you’re thinking of is lowercase lambda, λ.
Delta-v (literally “change in velocity”), symbolized as ∆v and pronounced delta-vee, as used in spacecraft flight dynamics, is a measure of the impulse per unit of spacecraft mass that is needed to perform a maneuver such as launch from, or landing on a planet or moon, or in-space orbital maneuver. It is a scalar that has the units of speed. As used in this context, it is not the same as the physical change in velocity of the vehicle. (Source- Wikipedia.)