Originally posted by The Sorrow
Thor's feat was hyperbole though, the Midgard Serpent is possibly not far off that weight but it's not the most clear-cut of feats. Lifting Asgard is one of his better recent showings but it was shared, I'm not convinced Thor could lift/move a small planet especially not current Thor. Similar thing for Hercules.
Thor and Bill didn't lift Asgard. Post the scan, it was all energy.
Re: Who In Marvel Can Lift 200 Quintillion Tons
Who can lift 200 quintillion tons? ( = approx. 3% of the Earth's mass)
1. Skaar after he absorbed 100 trillion tons of power?
Nope, not even close.
2. Thor?
Nope, not even close (excluding a couple of anomalous showings).
3. WBH?
Not enough feats.
4. Hercules?
Nope, not even close.
5. Savage Hulk(the one who overpowerd planet skaar from exploding by pulling the planet together)?
Nope, not even close.
6. Grey hulk (after he one shotted the astroid 2x earths mass)?
Nope, not even close.
7. Rulk?
Nope, not even close.
8. Thanos?
Nope, not even close (excluding cosmic artifacts).
9. Silver Surfer?
Nope, not even close.
10. Black Adam?
Perhaps, but unlikely.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintillion#Standard_dictionary_numbers
Just to give people some perspective of how much 200 quintillion tons is, it is 200,000,000,000,000,000,000 tons.
http://www.mathcats.com/explore/reallybignumbers.html
Copy/paste the number I gave in case you don't believe me.
I don't know much about Green Scar, but since 100 trillion tons is 1/10th of one quadrillion tons, and 100 quadrillion tons is 1/10th of one quintillion tons, I'm thinking that he won't come close. Since 100 quadrillion tons is 1/100th of a single quintillion, making it 1/20,000th of 200 quintillion. Unless I'm doing the math wrong, which is a possibility, but doesn't change the fact that a hundred trillion tons is still much, much less than even a quintillion tons.
Also it is correct that it was pointed-out that ALL-STAR Superman did this with one hand, with relative ease, and I should add they didn't believe they came close to finding his limit.
Originally posted by carver9
He pushed back two positive and negative antimatter bombs from each other.
Matter and antimatter particles have the same mass, and therefore the same gravitational interactions. They possess opposite electrical charges though (electron vs. positron, proton vs. antiproton, and so on).
Since bulk matter is electrically neutral (it has equal amounts of protons and electrons), bulk antimatter is too. Thus, the only notable interaction between two such antimatter bombs is gravity. When the objects in question are so small, the gravitational force between them is almost non-existent.
Thus the quoted feat is not a feat of strength but a feat of ignorance in physics by the writer.
Originally posted by Magnon
Matter and antimatter particles have the same mass, and therefore the same gravitational interactions. They possess opposite electrical charges though (electron vs. positron, proton vs. antiproton, and so on).Since bulk matter is electrically neutral (it has equal amounts of protons and electrons), bulk antimatter is too. Thus, the only notable interaction between two such antimatter bombs is gravity. When the objects in question are so small, the gravitational force between them is almost non-existent.
Thus the quoted feat is not a feat of strength but a feat of ignorance in physics by the writer.
Which happens a lot.
Originally posted by Classic NES
What's scary is that AS Supes did that feat with one arm and no signs of stress & duress.
Originally posted by Galan007
A more precise question would be: "Who in Marvel can casually lift 200 quintillion tons with one arm?"IF you are trying to gauge A/S Superman's feat, that is.
Originally posted by Delta1938
Also it is correct that it was pointed-out that ALL-STAR Superman did this with one hand, with relative ease, and I should add they didn't believe they came close to finding his limit.
😉
Originally posted by The Sorrow
Thor's feat was hyperbole though, the Midgard Serpent is possibly not far off that weight but it's not the most clear-cut of feats.
Its not the weight of the Midgard Serpent that should be viewed in that scene but the pressure it applied in order to crush the Earth.Earth isn't easy to crush since its 6.6 Sextillion tons ball of iron mass.Basically, the Midgard Serpent would need to apply pressure many times the Earth's mass.And its clear from the scene, the Midgard Serpent was crushing the Earth in its coil since it was causing disaster all over the globe.Who knows how much pressure the Midgard Serpent was applying?I'm pretty sure its multiple times the Earth's own mass.
Originally posted by Igniz
Its not the weight of the Midgard Serpent that should be viewed in that scene but the pressure it applied in order to crush the Earth.Earth isn't easy to crush since its 6.6 Sextillion tons ball of iron mass.Basically, the Midgard Serpent would need to apply pressure many times the Earth's mass.And its clear from the scene, the Midgard Serpent was crushing the Earth in its coil since it was causing disaster all over the globe.Who knows how much pressure the Midgard Serpent was applying?I'm pretty sure its multiple times the Earth's own mass.
Earth is not a 6.6 sextillion ton ball of solid iron mass. I don't know what the weight comes to, but a quick search showed the iron core(which isn't solid) composes about 16% of the Earth's volume.
Originally posted by Igniz
Its not the weight of the Midgard Serpent that should be viewed in that scene but the pressure it applied in order to crush the Earth.Earth isn't easy to crush since its 6.6 Sextillion tons ball of iron mass.Basically, the Midgard Serpent would need to apply pressure many times the Earth's mass.And its clear from the scene, the Midgard Serpent was crushing the Earth in its coil since it was causing disaster all over the globe.Who knows how much pressure the Midgard Serpent was applying?I'm pretty sure its multiple times the Earth's own mass.
Thanos should be capable and Hulk are the only ones on this list from Marvel I can see lifting the weight of a small planet.