What did they say 2016-04-27
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
so has no-one wondered why Superman does not make a supersonic boom at that high a speed???
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Because the cartoonists (Jerry Seigel and Joe Schuster) who drew the first comics knew nothing about supersonic flight when they established the particulars of the character.illiad wrote:so has no-one wondered why Superman does not make a supersonic boom at that high a speed???
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- AnotherFairportfan
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Nor, really, did anyone else in 1938.Sgt. Howard wrote:Because the cartoonists (Jerry Seigel and Joe Schuster) who drew the first comics knew nothing about supersonic flight when they established the particulars of the character.illiad wrote:so has no-one wondered why Superman does not make a supersonic boom at that high a speed???
OTOH, it wasn't Siegel and Schuster who gave him the ability to fly - that came after the Fleischers began doing cartoons and everybody realised how ridiculous he looked leaping tall buildings at a single bound like a red and blue kangaroo. (The first - really only originally titled Superman, sometime referred to as The Death Ray or The Mad Scientist, shows signs of having been partially re-worked to make him fly rather than bound, but the opening "Faster than a speeding bullet..." sequence shows him leaping a tall building at a single bound, and it DOES look silly.)
Actually, there have been stories over the years in which there was a sonic boom, when it was a useful plot device.
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
There's some who posit that folks like the Flash (who runs really, really fast) and Superman (who can do that too but can also Fly!) create a warp of any atmosphere around them as they travel; pointy on both ends, reducing friction and avoiding superheating of the close-by surrounding environment.
Envision Superman hauling butt, big time, in order to get to the scene of the disaster in time and as he decelerates on a dime, he brings with him a meteor's worth of thermal death and destruction in his wake...
In a flyer like Atsali I can at least see her swooping in and those on the ground being blasted with a gust of 'jetwash'. so to speak... (feel free to use that imagery.)
Envision Superman hauling butt, big time, in order to get to the scene of the disaster in time and as he decelerates on a dime, he brings with him a meteor's worth of thermal death and destruction in his wake...
In a flyer like Atsali I can at least see her swooping in and those on the ground being blasted with a gust of 'jetwash'. so to speak... (feel free to use that imagery.)
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Anything with mass accelerating to any significant fraction of c will bring far more than a meteors' worth of death and destruction.
And going faster than that would probably create a scenario likethis.
And going faster than that would probably create a scenario likethis.
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He's mister exploiter, he's mister ones and zeros
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
PS- Anybody interested in more 'Where did Superman Come From?" type sources should investigate
Gladiator by Philip Wylie.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gladiator_%28novel%29
Free for download from the Gutenberg Press
Gladiator by Philip Wylie.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gladiator_%28novel%29
Free for download from the Gutenberg Press
Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Not quite true . . . the existence of sonic booms were well known in ballistics since the creation of effectual suppressors ("silencers") in the 1890s had allowed the eradication of muzzle blast as the primary noise source of a gunshot, but the "crack" still persisted . . . sometimes.AnotherFairportfan wrote:Nor, really, did anyone else in 1938.. . .Sgt. Howard wrote:Because the cartoonists (Jerry Seigel and Joe Schuster) who drew the first comics knew nothing about supersonic flight when they established the particulars of the character.illiad wrote:so has no-one wondered why Superman does not make a supersonic boom at that high a speed???
That investigation lead to the discovery that bullets exceeding approximately 1100-1200 feet per second were trailing what we now know as a miniature sonic boom.
The details of how that worked and how to deal with it were still being developed at that time, however.
--FreeFlier
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
So that explains why their super-suits didn't wind up bunched up around their ankles due to atmospheric friction... a cape should generate a little bit of drag I would think.TazManiac wrote:There's some who posit that folks like the Flash (who runs really, really fast) and Superman (who can do that too but can also Fly!) create a warp of any atmosphere around them as they travel; pointy on both ends, reducing friction and avoiding superheating of the close-by surrounding environment.
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
The latest explanation for the speedsters at DC is that they are connected to the "speed force" - whatever that is.
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Amphetamines?AnotherFairportfan wrote:The latest explanation for the speedsters at DC is that they are connected to the "speed force" - whatever that is.
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
That might explain Impulse, anyway.Catawampus wrote:Amphetamines?AnotherFairportfan wrote:The latest explanation for the speedsters at DC is that they are connected to the "speed force" - whatever that is.
Proof Positive the world is not flat: If it were, cats would have pushed everything off the edge by now.
Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Kryptonian caffeine.Catawampus wrote:Amphetamines?AnotherFairportfan wrote:The latest explanation for the speedsters at DC is that they are connected to the "speed force" - whatever that is.
--FreeFlier
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
"Sorry, Mr. Kent, but I don't serve that here," Tina said with a frown.FreeFlier wrote:Kryptonian caffeine.Catawampus wrote:Amphetamines?AnotherFairportfan wrote:The latest explanation for the speedsters at DC is that they are connected to the "speed force" - whatever that is.
--FreeFlier
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- GlytchMeister
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Glytch:
"Doesn't that stuff have a Material Safety Data Sheet? I'm sure I've seen it in my lab at some point. Lemme check with our suppliers, I might be able to get you some."
"Doesn't that stuff have a Material Safety Data Sheet? I'm sure I've seen it in my lab at some point. Lemme check with our suppliers, I might be able to get you some."
He's mister GlytchMeister, he's mister code
He's mister exploiter, he's mister ones and zeros
They call me GlytchMeister, whatever I touch
Starts to glitch in my clutch!
I'm too much!
He's mister exploiter, he's mister ones and zeros
They call me GlytchMeister, whatever I touch
Starts to glitch in my clutch!
I'm too much!
Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
Well, there's light roast, medium roast, dark roast, and glowing-green roast...
Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
do you mean this??GlytchMeister wrote:Glytch:
"Doesn't that stuff have a Material Safety Data Sheet? I'm sure I've seen it in my lab at some point. Lemme check with our suppliers, I might be able to get you some."
https://matt.simerson.net/humor/women_hazmat.shtml
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
"The Science of Superheroes" by James Kakalios devotes a whole chapter(Chapter 5, 'Flash Facts - Friction, Drag and Sound') to such problems with the Flash...
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Re: What did they say 2016-04-27
I just dipped back into Marion Harmon's second "Capes" book, and Astra (who is the classic "flying brick' type - super strength, flight, near-invulnerability, etc., mentions that when she's in a hurry to get to the scene of the action, the overpressure wave that she produces sets off car alarms all along her flight path.
{Astra is capable of Mach 3; she' about five-foot-nothibg, weighs less than a hundred pounds, looks about fourteen without her padded costume and mask/wig - and can pick up a city bus and hit you with it.}
{Astra is capable of Mach 3; she' about five-foot-nothibg, weighs less than a hundred pounds, looks about fourteen without her padded costume and mask/wig - and can pick up a city bus and hit you with it.}
Proof Positive the world is not flat: If it were, cats would have pushed everything off the edge by now.