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**can you make this for me? Create a vertical scientific schematic diagram in the style of a NASA or peer-reviewed journal figure, showing a cross-sectional cutaway of a subsurface ocean plume erupting through an ice shell into space. The composition should be tall and vertically oriented, with the source at the bottom and particle dispersal upward. At the base, depict a subsurface ocean beneath an ice layer, labeled with depth, pressure, and temperature ranges. Hydrothermal vents release gas and particles upward through a narrow vent. Above the vent, show bubble formation and bursting at the ice-ocean interface, transitioning into a collimated plume that widens as it rises. Use semi-transparent gradients to represent gas flow, with black circular particles of varying sizes embedded within the plume. Larger particles fall back downward as "snow," while smaller particles accelerate upward and escape. Use a clean vector-graphic style with flat colors, subtle gradients, crisp lines, arrows, and readable scientific labels. The color palette should be muted and professional (blues, purples, grays) with accent colors for arrows and annotations. The overall aesthetic should be technical, educational, and publication-ready no artistic textures, no realism, no dramatic lighting. Avoid photorealism, cinematic lighting, painterly textures, artistic backgrounds, decorative effects, hand-drawn styles, cartoons, or sci-fi aesthetics.** - <@1122827125259513927> (fast)