Can Superman replicate Gladiator's crossing galaxy feat

Started by AlbertoJohnAvil13 pages

Can Superman replicate Gladiator's crossing galaxy feat

What has Superman done comparable or above to Glads crossed a damn galaxy in the blink of an eye

Probably his AC feat or his Bizarro city feat etc

How long did it take?

the average galaxy is 100k light years for reference.

Originally posted by AlbertoJohnAvil
the average galaxy is 100k light years for reference.

How large was the one gladiator crossed?

Hasn’t Superman escaped black holes which is hard to quantify given it should imply resisting infinite mass by going faster than it could pull some weird sci-fi stuff like that.

There’s also that edge of the universe feat in 60 days I believe which I don’t know how it translates but I’d imagine if it’s not greater it’s comparable.

Originally posted by xJLxKing
How large was the one gladiator crossed?

Considering that you have to go through our Galaxy to get to asgardia which is its own galaxy and HE came from shi'ar a super galaxy with galaxies in between it and we'RE assuming our galaxy is 100k light years. . Plus asgardia which lets just say is small and his own galaxy which is bigger than ours. Because shi'ar space is bigger than ours. At minimum two large galaxies and a couple small galaxies. Cause multiple galaxies I'm low balling hang inbetween.

How long did it take? No head canon, quantifiable numbers only please.

the Shi’Ar have a prison system roughly the size of our own galaxy and this is just for prisoners to the empire:

Ok.

So give us numbers for Superman to replicate.

Originally posted by DarkSaint85
Ok.

So give us numbers for Superman to replicate.

how fast is the blink of an eye?

You tell us.

You're the one who made the thread. If it's unquantifiable, then fair enough.

If all you have is head canon and assumptions that's also cool.

Originally posted by DarkSaint85
You tell us.

You're the one who made the thread. If it's unquantifiable, then fair enough.

If all you have is head canon and assumptions that's also cool.

What about the numbers of Superman repairing the moon? Where's that at?

Anyways, I wanna do some math for you, since you love real world figures.
Just for you, I went and found the smallest galaxy on record.

That would be Segue 2, about 221.79 light years across.
Gladiator crossed "multiple" galaxies, so let's lowball again and say 3.
3 × 221.79 = 665.37 light years.
We'll lowball again and say these galaxies were back to back with no gaps.
He traveled this distance in the time it took Heimdall to blink.
Average blink is 300-400 milliseconds. So, he moved 665.37 in about a 3rd of a second.
665.37 × 3 = 1996.11 lightyears in a second.
1996.11 × 3600 = 7,185,996 lightyear an hour.
I had to find a lightyear to mile calculator for this part, but I found that
7,185,196 lightyears is 42,243,778,417,195,910,000 miles.. so, 42.2 quintillion mph.
The speed of light is only 670,616,629 mph.
42,243,778,417,195,910,000 ÷ 670,616,629 = 62992440972.1, so
62,992,440,972, so if we lowball Gladiator TO THE UTMOST then you are correct, he was only moving at 63 billion times the speed of light.
But the average galaxy is about 450 times larger than our starting measurement of Segue 2 at ~222 lightyears.
So... I'm gonna just say **** the math and multiply the end result by 450.
62,992,440,972 x 450 = 2.8346598×10¹³, or 28,346,598,000,000 times the speed of light, so at minimum 30 times faster than Superman's feat.

So just headcanon and assumptions 😂

and that's also assuming that every galaxy mashed up back to back, with no space in between, and IGNORING that, solar distances in the Shiar Empire are far larger than ours, same for their galaxies.

Originally posted by DarkSaint85
So just headcanon and assumptions 😂

Except I used all those real world physics.

Originally posted by AlbertoJohnAvil
Anyways, I wanna do some math for you, since you love real world figures.
Just for you, I went and found the smallest galaxy on record.

That would be Segue 2, about 221.79 light years across.
Gladiator crossed "multiple" galaxies, so let's lowball again and say 3.
3 × 221.79 = 665.37 light years.
We'll lowball again and say these galaxies were back to back with no gaps.
He traveled this distance in the time it took Heimdall to blink.
Average blink is 300-400 milliseconds. So, he moved 665.37 in about a 3rd of a second.
665.37 × 3 = 1996.11 lightyears in a second.
1996.11 × 3600 = 7,185,996 lightyear an hour.
I had to find a lightyear to mile calculator for this part, but I found that
7,185,196 lightyears is 42,243,778,417,195,910,000 miles.. so, 42.2 quintillion mph.
The speed of light is only 670,616,629 mph.
42,243,778,417,195,910,000 ÷ 670,616,629 = 62992440972.1, so
62,992,440,972, so if we lowball Gladiator TO THE UTMOST then you are correct, he was only moving at 63 billion times the speed of light.
But the average galaxy is about 450 times larger than our starting measurement of Segue 2 at ~222 lightyears.
So... I'm gonna just say **** the math and multiply the end result by 450.
62,992,440,972 x 450 = 2.8346598×10¹³, or 28,346,598,000,000 times the speed of light, so at minimum 30 times faster than Superman's feat.

Are you comparing this to rebuilding the Moon?

Originally posted by Delta1938
Are you comparing this to rebuilding the Moon?

...No, it's not comparable, because they're two complete different feats. Pure travel speed versus super speed, but for the fact that Superman was talking to someone else, in real time, I can absolutely confirm that Gladiator was moving much faster.

Alberto doesn't understand what hyperbole is.

The text never said Gladiator actually crossed a galaxy. In the blink of an eye or otherwise.

It's just saying he's really really fast. You can find similar statements for all characters in comics, like Thor being called "As fast as the Lightning he commands", which he most definitely is not.