So, they showed Orion's true form.
Originally posted by Senor Cage
So, they showed Orion's true form.
Terrible. DC just needs to stop at this point
Originally posted by Senor Cagefreaking contradictions. Last weeks Orion looked the same when AlE was destroying apocalips before Darkseid left. So some time in the future he reverts back to his old self?
So, they showed Orion's true form.
Originally posted by Senor CageHorrible appearance design tbh.
So, they showed Orion's true form.
Originally posted by Magnon
Actually, no.Locally, nothing special happens at the event horizon. If the black hole was big enough, a planet could survive the tidal forces acting near the horizon and thus cross the horizon intact -- the Roche limit for an object approaching a black hole does not have to be outside or at the horizon. On the other hand, if the black hole was small its tidal forces would destroy the planet already long before the horizon.
Thank you, but I think we're getting in the weeds, I'm simply addressing this as a durability feat. Usually, event horizon = very bad, for black holes.
In this particular issue, the Event Horizon is implied to be the danger zone. And Jon's black hole gun forced the event horizon to expel and repel matter. That implies that if the planet crossed the event horizon, it would be bad. Probably crushed. Or perhaps lost if we assume the black hole is big enough that the planet would cross intact, but then, is it a durability feat anymore?
What is the significance of crossing the event horizon if the black hole is in-fact small? Does it become even more intense?
But I like your explanation, because this becomes a much cooler feat:
https://i.imgur.com/cQ2XIHD.jpg
Originally posted by Rage.Of.Olympus
Thank you, but I think we're getting in the weeds, I'm simply addressing this as a durability feat. Usually, event horizon = very bad, for black holes.In this particular issue, the Event Horizon is implied to be the danger zone. And Jon's black hole gun forced the event horizon to expel and repel matter. That implies that if the planet crossed the event horizon, it would be bad. Probably crushed. Or perhaps lost if we assume the black hole is big enough that the planet would cross intact, but then, is it a durability feat anymore?
What is the significance of crossing the event horizon if the black hole is in-fact small? Does it become even more intense?
But I like your explanation, because this becomes a much cooler feat:
https://i.imgur.com/cQ2XIHD.jpg
😂 didn't believe abhi for a second, never happening. always tell dudes to read the comic before listening to that clown 👍