Originally posted by h1a8LOL No. It'makes Superman's getting instantly ko'd by a nuc even more embarrassing is what it does. That's why you want people to stop talking about it. We already knew Superman's HV wouldn't do shit to Thor.
Enough with the neutron star feat. All it does is give Thor some resistance against HV. Nothing more.
Superman is stronger, vastly faster, and more durable against blunt forces.
Originally posted by The Spectre+The heat generated from a nuclear warhead can get up to around 150 million degrees fahrenheit. A neutron star can get over 1 billion kelvin easily. 1 billion kelvin is almost 2 billion fahrenheit. Thor took that for several minutes. Superman was ko'd by the nuc instantly and needed a yellow star to save him.
can someone pls tell me the amount of heat/force emitted from a neutron star in a concentrated beam.
and the heat and force from a nuke?pls pardon my lack of knowledge on this
Originally posted by CPT Space BombHow can anyone think a nuke is comparable to a neutral star. Superman fans are the worst.
The heat generated from a nuclear warhead can get up to around 150 million degrees fahrenheit. A neutron star can get over 1 billion kelvin easily. 1 billion kelvin is almost 2 billion fahrenheit. Thor took that for several minutes. Superman was ko'd by the nuc instantly and needed a yellow star to save him.
Originally posted by WolvesofBabylon
I like how people are trying to use real world physics in measuring the power/heat of the star when in reality they couldnt have gotten anywhere near a Neutron star without being crushed by the gravitational force. So I guess Rocket is made of planet buster durability as well.
As opposed to using real world physics to measure how impressive withstanding a nuke is?
Originally posted by Josh_Alexander
The Nuke is also a heat feat. You could actually see Super's bones! Whilst Thor only had 3rd degree burns.Furthermore, the Star also has radiation and kinetic energy.
Radiation and Heat yes. You need matter to have kinetic energy. Some gases probably hit Thor as he was pushed through space. But it wasn't a lot of force since he never accelerated a large amount.
Irrelevant since resistance against heat will only help Thor with the hv. It will not help him with punches to the face.
Originally posted by h1a8
Radiation and Heat yes. You need matter to have kinetic energy. Some gases probably hit Thor as he was pushed through space. But it wasn't a lot of force since he never accelerated a large amount.Irrelevant since resistance against heat will only help Thor with the hv. It will not help him with punches to the face.
What about gravity?
Originally posted by h1a8
Radiation and Heat yes. You need matter to have kinetic energy. Some gases probably hit Thor as he was pushed through space. But it wasn't a lot of force since he never accelerated a large amount.Irrelevant since resistance against heat will only help Thor with the hv. It will not help him with punches to the face.
Again, thanks for proving that you suck at science.
Originally posted by Nibedicus
So gravity, magnetism, not forces?
Gravity pulls, not pushes. Thor was pushed, not pulled. Gravity from that distance wasn't affecting anyone (including Rocket and Groot). So no, gravity wasn't an apparent force in the movie.
Magnetism wasn't an apparent force either since Groot, Rocket, etc was affected.
The only thing that acted on Thor was heat and some push forces from the beam.
Originally posted by h1a8Don't you get tired of tooling these fools?
Gravity pulls, not pushes. Thor was pushed, not pulled. Gravity from that distance wasn't affecting anyone (including Rocket and Groot). So no, gravity wasn't an apparent force in the movie.Magnetism wasn't an apparent force either since Groot, Rocket, etc was affected.
The only thing that acted on Thor was heat and some push forces from the beam.
Originally posted by h1a8
Gravity pulls, not pushes. Thor was pushed, not pulled. Gravity from that distance wasn't affecting anyone (including Rocket and Groot). So no, gravity wasn't an apparent force in the movie.Magnetism wasn't an apparent force either since Groot, Rocket, etc was affected.
The only thing that acted on Thor was heat and some push forces from the beam.
Well you have a point.
And yet Thor was taking punches straigth to the face by Hulk whose strength rivals that of Superman and DD.
Originally posted by h1a8
Gravity pulls, not pushes. Thor was pushed, not pulled. Gravity from that distance wasn't affecting anyone (including Rocket and Groot). So no, gravity wasn't an apparent force in the movie.Magnetism wasn't an apparent force either since Groot, Rocket, etc was affected.
The only thing that acted on Thor was heat and some push forces from the beam.
To quote:
Originally posted by Nibedicus
Thor: All Fathers give me strength.
Eitri: You understand, boy, you are about to take the full force of a star, it'll kill you.
Full force, not just heat. But full force of a star.
Writer's intent.
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