Superman in the New 52

Started by Rao Kal El16 pages

Originally posted by JakeTheBank
I've only just been back for a week or so, so I don't know the current status quos.

Rest assured, I will assume direct control of the Thor Corps.

You should, they are in need of a leader.

[QUOTE=14254403]Originally posted by Rao Kal El
[B]WRONG!

Sir,

Did you just say that the color of the sun makes a difference?

Last I checked, radiation is radiation and the true color of the sun (white) is constant. Red/Yellow sun energy is nonsense.

Comic writers made up augmentation of sun dipping and him gaining a nice recharge from the yellow Sun radiation.

Superman's powers and occasional augmentations are a bit 1960's and need to be updated with some modern validity.

But simply arguing science about the color of the Sun...REALLY?

As intelligent as you portray yourself, you are the guy who looks to hide in the corner of a circular room. 😠

Read again sherif.

RADITION WAVELENGTH.

I know is a big word for some, but We have internet, USE IT!

"Light from Stars

Because stars emit light with different wavelengths, they have different colors. Stars do not just emit one wavelength of electromagnetic radiation, but a range of wavelengths.

The wavelength at which a star emits the most light is called the star's peak wavelength. The most of that wavelength will give the star it's color"

This "wavelength of electromagnetic radiation" is the one that Superman feeds off, but the one produced by Red Stars is not enough to trigger his powers.

Happy?

I have read your statements thoroughly Sir.

I hate to tell you this but Wavelengths DO NOT determine the color of a star. The color is determined by temperature.
With that said, Red sun vs yellow sun means one is cooler than the other.

My suggestion to you Sir is to return to school and slap everyone of your teachers; because they failed you by giving you a passing grade.

Radiation is a process of which particles or energetic waves travels through for example: a vacuum.
the color of the Sun has no affect on the process.

If you require further assistance, please feel free to call (555)867-5309. Sincerely, Sheriff Bart

But for the record, Yes I am happy, thank you for asking.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
Read again sherif.

RADITION WAVELENGTH.

I know is a big word for some, but We have internet, USE IT!

"Light from Stars

Because stars emit light with different wavelengths, they have different colors. Stars do not just emit one wavelength of electromagnetic radiation, but a range of wavelengths.

The wavelength at which a star emits the most light is called the star's peak wavelength. The most of that wavelength will give the star it's color"

This "wavelength of electromagnetic radiation" is the one that Superman feeds off, but the one produced by Red Stars is not enough to trigger his powers.

Happy?

Originally posted by SMIFF-N-WESSON
I have read your statements thoroughly Sir.

I hate to tell you this but Wavelengths DO NOT determine the color of a star. The color is determined by temperature.
With that said, Red sun vs yellow sun means one is cooler than the other.

My suggestion to you Sir is to return to school and slap everyone of your teachers; because they failed you by giving you a passing grade.

Radiation is a process of which particles or energetic waves travels through for example: a vacuum.
the color of the Sun has no affect on the process.

If you require further assistance, please feel free to call (555)867-5309. Sincerely, Sheriff Bart

I think you are right, I should go back to school and slap my English teachers because I have been unable to explaining such an easy topic to you.

I won't blame anyone but me, but allow me into trying to explain this in easy terms to the lemon.

Superman does not feed on the "color" of the star, he feeds on the radiation wavelength.

The radiation wavelength will vary depending on the color of the star.

Red stars are cooler than yellow stars, therefore it's radiation wavelength will be different.

To put this on easier terms for me to explain.

Lets say you have a silver spoon that you heat up on a microwave

While cool, the spoon is silver and the radiation wavelength emitted by the spoon will start changing as soon as the spoon heats up, you will also notice (since temperature, color ans wavelength are related) that the color of the spoon will start changing as soon as the spoon heats up.

It will go from silver to probably red hot, to Blue, to white besides the color changing it's radiation wavelength will change and also it's temperature.

Unless you think a cold object emits the same radiation wavelength as a hot object, which apparently, you seem to think so.

So I will ask you:

Do you think a star than is colder will emit the same radiation wavelength than a hotter star?

If you do, and quote "My suggestion to you Sir is to return to school and slap everyone of your teachers; because they failed you by giving you a passing grade"

Geez! You see what I mean with my english?

Here is the right question

Do you think a star that is colder will emit the same radiation wavelength than a hotter star?

Btw, I'm glad you happy.

I love it when a problem works itself out.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
Geez! You see what I mean with my english?

Here is the right question

[B]Do you think a star that is colder will emit the same radiation wavelength than a hotter star?

Btw, I'm glad you happy. [/B]

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
I think you are right, I should go back to school and slap my English teachers because I have been unable to explaining such an easy topic to you.

I won't blame anyone but me, but allow me into trying to explain this in easy terms to the lemon.

Superman does not feed on the "color" of the star, he feeds on the radiation wavelength.

The radiation wavelength will vary depending on the color of the star.

Red stars are cooler than yellow stars, therefore it's radiation wavelength will be different.

To put this on easier terms for me to explain.

Lets say you have a silver spoon that you heat up on a microwave

While cool, the spoon is silver and the radiation wavelength emitted by the spoon will start changing as soon as the spoon heats up, you will also notice (since temperature, color ans wavelength are related) that the color of the spoon will start changing as soon as the spoon heats up.

It will go from silver to probably red hot, to Blue, to white besides the color changing it's radiation wavelength will change and also it's temperature.

Unless you think a cold object emits the same radiation wavelength as a hot object, which apparently, you seem to think so.

So I will ask you:

[B]Do you think a star than is colder will emit the same radiation wavelength than a hotter star?

If you do, and quote "My suggestion to you Sir is to return to school and slap everyone of your teachers; because they failed you by giving you a passing grade" [/B]

To answer your question, let me begin with my point. I am not arguing Superman getting his powers through wavelength. I am debating the point of Yellow vs Red radiation.
Now to answer your question: (sips coffee)
For starters, the color does NOT affect the wavelength and you cannot see the wavelength with human eyes for that matter.
YES a colder star will generate the same radiation as a warmer one. the notable difference is the intensity of the radiation but there is no more or less. (example) if you turn on your shower the water runs.... adjust the shower head and the same amount of water is flowing but at different intensity, same as a garden hose with or without you using your thumb to stream the water.
As for your silver spoon in the microwave....all you would see is a few electrical impulses.
If you need further lessons in the matter, please feel free to ask. Sincerely, Sheriff Bart.

Originally posted by SMIFF-N-WESSON
To answer your question, let me begin with my point. I am not arguing Superman getting his powers through wavelength. I am debating the point of Yellow vs Red radiation.
Now to answer your question: (sips coffee)
For starters, the color does NOT affect the wavelength and you cannot see the wavelength with human eyes for that matter.
YES a colder star will generate the same radiation as a warmer one. the notable difference is the intensity of the radiation but there is no more or less. (example) if you turn on your shower the water runs.... adjust the shower head and the same amount of water is flowing but at different intensity, same as a garden hose with or without you using your thumb to stream the water.
As for your silver spoon in the microwave....all you would see is a few electrical impulses.
If you need further lessons in the matter, please feel free to ask. Sincerely, Sheriff Bart.

😂 NO!

Your shower example is flawed as We are not talking about liquids and liquid pressure.

We are talking about radiation wavelength emitted by colder and hotter objects.

sigh! here:

"How are wavelength and temperature related?

All objects emit electromagnetic radiation, and the amount of radiation emitted at each wavelength depends on the temperature of the object. Hot objects emit more of their light at short wavelengths, and cold objects emit more of their light at long wavelengths. The temperature of an object is related to the wavelength at which the object gives out the most light.

HubbleSite and STScI are not responsible for content found outside of hubblesite.org and stsci.edu"

"How are temperature and color related?

The amount of light produced at each wavelength depends on the temperature of the object producing the light. Stars hotter than the Sun (over 6,000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the blue and ultraviolet regions of the spectrum. Stars cooler than the Sun (below 5,000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the red and infrared regions of the spectrum. Solid objects heated to 1,000 degrees C appear red but are putting out far more (invisible) infrared light than red light."

I am humble and I don't think I am smarter than people that work with the hubble telescope. So unless you think you are, you have been schooled in here by them.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
😂 NO!

Your shower example is flawed as We are not talking about liquids and liquid pressure.

We are talking about radiation wavelength emitted by colder and hotter objects.

sigh! here:

"How are wavelength and temperature related?

All objects emit electromagnetic radiation, and the amount of radiation emitted at each wavelength depends on the temperature of the object. Hot objects emit more of their light at short wavelengths, and cold objects emit more of their light at long wavelengths. The temperature of an object is related to the wavelength at which the object gives out the most light.

HubbleSite and STScI are not responsible for content found outside of hubblesite.org and stsci.edu"

"How are temperature and color related?

The amount of light produced at each wavelength depends on the temperature of the object producing the light. Stars hotter than the Sun (over 6,000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the blue and ultraviolet regions of the spectrum. Stars cooler than the Sun (below 5,000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the red and infrared regions of the spectrum. Solid objects heated to 1,000 degrees C appear red but are putting out far more (invisible) infrared light than red light."

I am humble and I don't think I am smarter than people that work with the hubble telescope. So unless you think you are, you have been schooled in here by them.

They are correct, the problem is your reading comprehension.
Allow the Good Sheriff to explain their research:
They are explaining how much LIGHT is produced by temperature.

(see)"appear red but are putting out far more (invisible) infrared light than red light."

Pay attention my Son,
Light is not radiation.

Now back to your "liquid" comment.
It's called an analogy, I used an easy example for you to understand physics but apparently you missed the clue train as well.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
Read again sherif.

RADITION WAVELENGTH.

I know is a big word for some, but We have internet, USE IT!

"Light from Stars

Because stars emit light with different wavelengths, they have different colors. Stars do not just emit one wavelength of electromagnetic radiation, but a range of wavelengths.

The wavelength at which a star emits the most light is called the star's peak wavelength. The most of that wavelength will give the star it's color"

This "wavelength of electromagnetic radiation" is the one that Superman feeds off, but the one produced by Red Stars is not enough to trigger his powers.

Happy?

i'll keep this one short.

why would a red star nullify superman and his powers like they do in comics?

EXACTLY: red sun emits radiation, yellow sun emits radiation, one sun is cooler than the other but basically both are the same so why do they affect his powers differently?

Originally posted by jedi90
i'll keep this one short.

why would a red star nullify superman and his powers like they do in comics?

But keep in mind that 1/2 infinity is still infinity.

Originally posted by SMIFF-N-WESSON
EXACTLY: red sun emits radiation, yellow sun emits radiation, one sun is cooler than the other but basically both are the same so why do they affect his powers differently?

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
That will make you WRONG once more 😆

That shows the quality of guy you might be... Anyhow


let me get this straight, you criticize me for a typo and link that to my character when your own statement was full of glaring grammatical errors (i.e. incorrect capitalization, missing punctuation, poor sentence structure)

Originally posted by Rao Kal El

Kryptonians feed on the radiation wavelength of every star,

Originally posted by Rao Kal El

the radiation wavelength of a red star is not enough to trigger his powers, the radiation wavelength that Blue, White and Yellow stars emit will do the work.

sounds quite illogical to me.
Originally posted by Rao Kal El

Not widely used??? just by every single living being on the planet and you are the one who missed the point, you are crying and moaning that his source of energy is dumb, when you have "the force" on what it seems to be fictional universe you like That my friend is called hypocrisy.
How did Anakin Skywalker was conceived? Oh yes. That is completely more credible than getting power from a star. 🙄

reading comprehension is something you didn't learn with your english apparently. YOU brought the force into the argument, comparing an object of pure make believe to a real object.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El

Ok cool, I understand your point, you don't like it.
Yes there are things I don't like as well, not from this particular topic, but there are things I don't like.

Can you just get over it and move on? or at least make sure to direct you anger to the right source. That will be that way ==============>

Well, you might have read a few issues, but If you were versed on the topic of Superman, I will not have to explain all this things to you, yet you come here and act like you know a lot about Superman... Which of course We know, you don't, but still, you try to disguise your ignorance. Is OK dude. You don't need to know everything. Hell even I don't know every single detail about Superman or Star Wars and I like both, but I rather read what a more versed person has to say on the topic of Star Wars than an idiot who barely knows anything about it.


nerd rage much? just a mere suggestion from me sends you into fits......

i'm debating between whether you have insecurity issues or were missing a father figure growing up.

here's the fun part, i don't have to meet your qualifications to have an opinion on anything superman related. can't help it if my responses intimidate your fragile ego.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
Read again sherif.

RADITION WAVELENGTH.

I know is a big word for some, but We have internet, USE IT!

"Light from Stars

Because stars emit light with different wavelengths, they have different colors. Stars do not just emit one wavelength of electromagnetic radiation, but a range of wavelengths.

The wavelength at which a star emits the most light is called the star's peak wavelength. The most of that wavelength will give the star it's color"

This "wavelength of electromagnetic radiation" is the one that Superman feeds off, but the one produced by Red Stars is not enough to trigger his powers.

Happy?

again, you are missing the point. a red star shouldn't kill superman's power and make him fall down weak.

from wiki on stars
The color of a star, as determined by the most intense frequency of the visible light, depends on the temperature of the star's outer layers, including its photosphere. Besides visible light, stars also emit forms of electromagnetic radiation that are invisible to the human eye

Originally posted by SMIFF-N-WESSON
They are correct, the problem is your reading comprehension.
Allow the Good Sheriff to explain their research:
They are explaining how much LIGHT is produced by temperature.

(see)"appear red but are putting out far more (invisible) infrared light than red light."

Pay attention my Son,
Light is not radiation.

Froma NASA "Einstein"

The electromagnetic (EM) spectrum is the range of all types of EM radiation. Radiation is energy that travels and spreads out as it goes – the visible light that comes from a lamp in your house and the radio waves that come from a radio station are two types of electromagnetic RADIATION . The other types of EM radiation that make up the electromagnetic spectrum are microwaves, infrared light, ultraviolet light, X-rays and gamma-rays.

I highlight that in case you missed the word, what does it says???

Originally posted by SMIFF-N-WESSON
Now back to your "liquid" comment.
It's called an analogy, I used an easy example for you to understand physics but apparently you missed the clue train as well.

Failed analogy that is.

Originally posted by -Pr-
lol nah. Just felt like a change.

Also gonna get a start on that respect thread soon, I think.

i'll be awaiting that thread with great interest....

Originally posted by jedi90
i'll keep this one short.

why would a red star nullify superman and his powers like they do in comics?

Oh now tweedle dum is joining as expected.

Go back and read, I'm not repeating my self with you.

I have already explained this like 3 times but apparently the butt hurt also affects duplication.

Originally posted by Rao Kal El
Froma NASA "Einstein"

The electromagnetic (EM) spectrum is the range of all types of EM radiation. Radiation is energy that travels and spreads out as it goes – [B]the visible light that comes from a lamp in your house and the radio waves that come from a radio station are two types of electromagnetic RADIATION . The other types of EM radiation that make up the electromagnetic spectrum are microwaves, infrared light, ultraviolet light, X-rays and gamma-rays.

I highlight that in case you missed the word, what does it says???

Failed analogy that is. [/B]

Yawn.....actually Light is radiant energy and the source is what produces radiation.

You should read up on radiation...oh i forgot, you are lacking in comprehension.

As for the relation to Supermans abilities...you haven't answered why the RED AND YELLOW Sun's have different affects.