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The entire population vanishes.
As in HBO's "The Leftovers," in which 2% of the population vanishes without explanation, the process by which this has occurred is fundamentally (for the moment, at least) uncanny and irrelevant: No one knows why this has happened, though suggestions of pollution and chemical agents float by in an establishing montage of news reports.
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Three years ago, 2% of the world's population vanished.
Available on Amazon Prime Instant Video End-of-days paranoia bumps up against fundamentalist anticipation of The Rapture in HBO's adaptation of the Tom Perotta novel about life in a world where 2% of the population vanish without explanation.
That would be approximately 25% of the population vanishing in a sea of terror.
An earthquake may claim tens of thousands of lives in an instant; in a tsunami, whole cities and their populations vanish in a flash.
Native Trichoderma spp. were poor pioneer colonizers of surface-sterilized pods and applied populations vanished within less than four weeks.
Furthermore, those values correspond to the ones stated in Theorem 2.1 for, since all the populations vanish except the susceptible which converges to.
Let's start with the opening scene--which should have been the most terrifying thing on the goddamn planet (2percentt of the world's population simply vanishes!)--and instead, felikeike the wet hiss of a miserable whistling kettle.
In the Tom Perrotta tale, by way of Damon Lindeloff, 2% of the world's population simply vanishes one day, a relatively small tear in the actual demographic but a gaping hole in the consciousness of those left behind.
The concept for the historic 1951 science fiction movie Five was in part inspired by his earlier radio play The Word, in which a newlywed couple awaken to find they are the only people left in a deserted New York City after the population mysteriously vanishes.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com