Reality check on superhero power

In summary, the protagonist of my story has the basic "flying brick" abilities, but no other powers. He is flying in for a landing in his current, drug-ridden, residential neighborhood at night, when he notices a gun being held to the head of a woman. He shifts into his enhanced reaction mode and sees the gunman shoot the woman. He crosses the 8 meters in the time it takes a bullet traveling 375m/s to exit out a 197mm barrel, and stops in mid-air to catch the bullet. Other than wasting his clothing and potentially blowing up the building, he has no other consequences.
  • #1
chasrob
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My story has a Superman analogue as the protagonist. His talents include the basic “flying brick” goodies, but no other powers.

Early in the story, soon after he was “transformed”, he’s flying in for a landing in his current, drug-ridden, residential neighborhood at night. He happens to look into a large living room window. Three men are waving Uzis around. On the floor, obviously alive but laying face-down, are two women and three men. Sure looks like an execution about to happen. He can’t hear any conversation, and he stops in mid-air to see what’s going on.

Suddenly one of the guys with a gun steps alongside one of the women, points it at the back of her head and shoots one shot, with obvious consequences. WTF? The super, new at this heroism gig, gapes and moves closer to the window. Almost immediately, the gunman turns to the next in line, another woman, and lines up a point-blank shot, about a foot away from her head.

Shifting into his enhanced reaction mode, superguy sees him pull the trigger. In through the big picture window he comes, catching the bullet as it exits the barrel.

Ok, the hero crosses, say, 8 meters in the time it takes a bullet traveling 375m/s to exit out a 197mm barrel (Uzi specs). My calculator says the super moved at roughly 55,000 km/hr; 34,000 mph; Mach 45. What would happen? Consider the consequences of his movement the same as if a man-sized missile did the honors. IOW, a 2 meter long, 90 kg massive object.

Other than wasting his clothing... will the superguy kill everyone in the room? And trash the building besides? Now would be a good time for him to lawyer up?

With a reaction time of 1.6 nanoseconds, what could he do to avoid catastrophe, without making things even worse?
 
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  • #2
chasrob said:
My story has a Superman analogue as the protagonist. His talents include the basic “flying brick” goodies, but no other powers.
...except super-duper speed and reaction times...

chasrob said:
With a reaction time of 1.6 nanoseconds, what could he do to avoid catastrophe, without making things even worse?
Throw a rock instead?

Actually, even at that, the rock would have to reach orbital speed. It would develop a shock front. Yeah. Even a rock would kill the shooter and the victim and blow out the wall, and carve a large crater in the ground.
 
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  • #3
So the shock wave from something with his mass moving at that speed, so close to the people would probably turn them into chunky salsa? Jeez, I'm actually starting to question the veracity of the old Superman stories.
 
  • #4
Take a look at this test firing of a US Navy experimental railgun:
http://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a21174/navy-electromagnetic-railgun/

The projectile in this case is "only" traveling at Mach 6 and it leaves a trailing fireball of a shockwave. Your superman is traveling ~7x faster than that and has a whole lot more surface area. IIRC the superman spinoff show Smallville was pretty good in this area. When Clark Kent was moving at superfast speeds you saw a sort of rippling bubble around him, anything within the bubble didn't seem too badly affected by his movements. I don't know if the show writers intended it but I always imagined that part of his magic abilities was to project a star-trek style inertial dampening field around himself that would smoothly move the air and objects around him, massively negating the effect of his super-speed passing.
 
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  • #5
Alas, my character has no magic abilities beyond the usual flight, invulnerability, super strength and speed. About 20 seconds into that video they show the projectile moving cleanly through the air. Ergo, how can anything possibly go wrong at mach 45? :wink:
 
  • #6
In that case your character is definitely going to fly less like superman and more like Neo in the second(?) matrix film in which a city is virtually destroyed as he drags a hurricane behind him. I don't think people will be heralding him as a hero for that! More likely they'll assign him to more appropriate work, like this:

http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=2305
 
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  • #7
Hey, everyone can breathe easier now :). In fact, supes can allow the bullet to exit the barrel plus the distance to the target; a half meter all told. So he can dial it down to mach 17.6, by my reckoning. That, or he'll definitely have to resist peering into windows in the future.
 
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  • #8
Ryan_m_b said:
In that case your character is definitely going to fly less like superman and more like Neo in the second(?) matrix film in which a city is virtually destroyed as he drags a hurricane behind him. I don't think people will be heralding him as a hero for that! More likely they'll assign him to more appropriate work, like this:

http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=2305
Good link.:smile: I do have the MC having publicity problems in the story.

I see another problem with my scenario. According to the capabilities I gave my character (which I pulled out of um... thin air) there may be nothing he can do about the shooter and the victim.

He has about 1.5 nanosecond reflexes in his enhanced state. Which also means, story-wise, one second in his frame is equal to 1.5 ns in everyone else’s frame.

So if he can see the trigger pull, my calculator says he has 7 1/2 months to decide what to do by the time the (slow) bullet hits the target. In his frame of reference. Good; plenty of time to regard his next move, yes?

But about seeing the trigger: superguy’s vision is 20/15. Good but nothing super. Maybe he can see the trigger finger movement from 8 meters away in a lit room; maybe not. The trigger is pretty obvious in an Uzi.The hammer itself? Didn't see it in the pictures I've seen.

If he can’t pick up the finger pull of the gunman, then what? The gunshot? Speed of sound is 343 m/s. The bullet has long ago hit the target. Depending on sound is not going to work. So it’s all up to whether he can perceive a trigger pull. Think that’s possible with his 20/15 eyesight?
Or maybe he could move as soon as the shooter takes aim.:cool:
 
  • #9
You have a bigger problem than whether or not he can recognize a trigger pull through a window (but honestly any "hero" who waits for a trigger to be pulled to intervene in a situation where someone is pointing a gun, after murdering another victim, is a moron). If this person can crank up their "mental clock speed" by a factor of 666 million they aren't actually going to be able to see or hear anything. From the hero's perspective all light suddenly becomes massively redshifted beyond the ability to perceive and all sound drops orders of magnitude beyond infrasonic. Unless the hero has magic senses too he isn't going to be able to act in speedster mode.

EDIT: Actually I don't think the light would become redshifted but the number of photons entering the eye per-second would go down by a factor of 666 million. Which would be extremely dark.
 
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  • #10
I don’t understand. The light wave length stretches? If he moves his head I can see that. Any normal movement by him would be magnified 666 million for a short distance and the wavelength stretched by that distance? If he’s standing still, could he just see a scene before him, the last photons to hit his eyes? Anyway, his perceptions and reactions are variable to almost a nanosecond. He didn’t necessarily put the pedal to the metal. What magic senses does he require?
 
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  • #11
Hmm, I wonder if he gets the power to slow his reactions down a million-fold... his eyes are swamped with photons? To everyone else he's an indestructible statue.
 
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  • #12
chasrob said:
I don’t understand. The light wave length stretches? If he moves his head I can see that. Any normal movement by him would be magnified 666 million for a short distance and the wavelength stretched by that. If he’s standing still, could he just see a scene before him, the last photons to hit his eyes? Anyway, his perceptions and reactions are variable to almost a nanosecond. He didn’t necessarily put the pedal to the metal. What magic senses does he require?

Ignore the question of light frequency, I don't think that would actually change. But the number of photons entering his eye per second (relative to his accelerated position) would decrease by a factor of hundreds of millions. He wouldn't see the last scene before him because the image would disappear instantly, assuming enough photons entered his eye to even activate his photoreceptors.
 
  • #13
Ryan_m_b said:
Your superman is traveling ~7x faster than that and has a whole lot more surface area.
And momentum is proportional to the square of the speed, so it has 49x more momentum.
 
  • #14
chasrob said:
He has about 1.5 nanosecond reflexes in his enhanced state. Which also means, story-wise, one second in his frame is equal to 1.5 ns in everyone else’s frame.

So if he can see the trigger pull, my calculator says he has 7 1/2 months to decide what to do by the time the (slow) bullet hits the target. In his frame of reference.
Hang on. It is not a given that an enhanced reaction time automatically requires actually living his life at that speed.
 
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  • #15
DaveC426913 said:
Hang on. It is not a given that an enhanced reaction time automatically requires actually living his life at that speed.
Story-wise it is. Although that is something to consider, if I understand you correctly.
 
  • #16
chasrob said:
Story-wise it is.
Ah. OK then.

IMO, that is a completely different story. The effect of actually living thousands of times faster than the rest of the world has broad implications. He could essentially stop every crime in New York city simultaneously and stop for a nap after each one. He could prevent every traffic accident. He is essentially moving around in a frozen world.
 
  • #17
DaveC426913 said:
Ah. OK then.

IMO, that is a completely different story. The effect of actually living thousands of times faster than the rest of the world has broad implications. He could essentially stop every crime in New York city simultaneously and stop for a nap after each one. He could prevent every traffic accident. He is essentially moving around in a frozen world.
But he presents a problem when shifting to the nanosecond mode, Dave. If a second is the same as a couple ns. to the outside world, then any movement he makes is amplified 600 million times. Maybe ok in outer space, but in atmosphere? He brings his hand up to scratch his chin, at what seems to him to be a normal pace. The shock waves alone would devastate the neighborhood. He's in normal time, sees an airplane going into a dive and about to augur into the ground, he shifts into high, zips down at what he sees as a casual pace. And waste the aircraft and terrain for miles around. Vigilantism? Let trained lawmen uphold the law; only interfere when he happens upon a situation where he could do some good.

Another thing I didn’t realize at the time—when I cooked up his numbers, I set his max velocity--flight or any movement he can make--at about 0.5 c. When he’s in quick mode, that means he can’t move faster than 25 cm per second in his POV, no matter what effort he puts into it. Slo-Mo. So if the plane is a few km away, he thinks it’s taking him forever to get there. Confusing. But the plane (and everything for that matter) is frozen in place; there is that. Just more confusion.
 
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  • #18
chasrob said:
any movement he makes is amplified 600 million times. Maybe ok in outer space, but in atmosphere? He brings his hand up to scratch his chin, at what seems to him to be a normal pace. The shock waves alone would devastate the neighborhood.
Indeed. It has always bothered me in such speedster stories when the hero swoops into grab the damsel and whisks her out of the way. You never hear about broken necks.

I've oft considered writing a story and trying to be as accurate as possible. Essentially, if our hero is sped up by 100 times, then everything - including people and air - should effectively have 100 times the inertia. Air would feel like soup; he would create eddies as he pushed his way through it. Our damsel would mass 5000kg. Now, when he attempts to move her, all her limbs will react as if extremely hard to move. If he shoved too hard, he would literally be tearing her body away from her 200kg head.
 
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  • #19
Looks like you should stick with the idea that the hero has a built-in warp drive, that extends somewhat around his body. This would soften the air and other things he wants to move around. Hopefully it would not speed the bullet up as he tries to catch it...
The problem with low light might he harder to solve. He might use his warp sense to feel matter around him... but seeing a distant trigger being pulled... not likely.
 
  • #20
You mean something of the sort like a Kirlian/ L-Field? It's been used elsewhere, as a sort of telekinesis effect--or something. Here's one comic's explanation. Thought about using it a couple times, but, a tad too much voodoo methinks :smile:. I just thought i'd go with the protag working with what he's been dealt. Conflict, y'know?
 
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  • #21
Well that's not what I had in my mind, it was more like having so fine sense of touch that he could feel the gravity of things near his body. If you are after a realistic description, it probably wouldn't work since his sense would be overwhelmed by Earth's gravity, at least in non-flying mode.
But you seem pretty good with these things, so I'll leave that up to you.
 
  • #22
SlowThinker said:
Looks like you should stick with the idea that the hero has a built-in warp drive, that extends somewhat around his body. This would soften the air and other things he wants to move around.
It won't eliminate the shock front when he moves though. It will just mean the bubble itself will cause the shock front.
 
  • #23
Last I had a reality check they didn't seem to be very bothered, just a day's work.
I liked the bit when the pretty Portuguese girl delivered esspresso coffee and said something about time.
It doesn't matter she said, well that's a good start.
 
  • #24
rootone said:
Last I had a reality check they didn't seem to be very bothered, just a day's work.
I liked the bit when the pretty Portuguese girl delivered esspresso coffee and said something about time.
It doesn't matter she said, well that's a good start.
Uh wut??
 

Related to Reality check on superhero power

1. How do superhero powers defy the laws of physics?

Superhero powers are often depicted as defying the laws of physics, but in reality, they are simply exaggerated or impossible versions of existing phenomena. For example, super strength could be explained by a mutant gene that amplifies muscle growth, or flying could be achieved through advanced technology like jetpacks.

2. Could any of these powers be possible in the future?

While the possibility of achieving some of these powers in the future cannot be completely ruled out, it is highly unlikely. The laws of physics and biology place limitations on what is physically possible for humans, and it is unlikely that we will be able to completely defy them without significant advancements in technology or genetic engineering.

3. How do superhero powers affect the human body?

The effects of superhero powers on the human body would depend on the specific power and how it is achieved. Some powers, like super strength, could potentially cause strain on the muscles and joints, while others, like invincibility, could have unknown consequences on the body's natural processes. Additionally, the psychological effects of having and using these powers would also need to be considered.

4. Are there any real-life examples of people with superhero-like abilities?

While there are no individuals with powers as extreme as those seen in comic books and movies, there are some real-life examples of people with extraordinary abilities. For example, some people have been known to have exceptional memory or physical capabilities, but these are often due to rare genetic mutations or intense training rather than superhuman powers.

5. How can we use science to explain and understand superhero powers?

Science can help us understand and explain the concepts behind superhero powers by breaking them down into smaller, more realistic components. By examining the laws of physics and biology, we can see how these powers could potentially be achieved through technology or genetic manipulation. Additionally, studying the psychological and social implications of having and using these powers can also provide insight into their potential real-world effects.

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