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Comic Book Physics

hij writes "NANDO net has an article about a physics professor at the University of Minnesota is offering a class in Comic Book Physics. He looks into such things as the amount of calories that the Flash burns and the tension in spider-mans web."

5 of 203 comments (clear)

  1. Batman and the vat of acid by jone_stone · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I once had a chemistry test in high school based on a Batman comic. Batman and Robin were falling into a vat of acid. It looked like the end for the dynamic duo. But after they fell in Robin was astonished to find that they didn't get burned.


    "Of course," said Batman. "The acid-neutralizing pills in my utility belt rendered the acid harmless before it was able to burn us."


    I don't remember the specific numbers of the question, but it was basically: if there were n gallons of 5 molar HCl in the vat and the pills were NaOH, how much must the pills have weighed? How much energy was released in the reaction, and are Batman and Robin likely to have survived?


    Batman would have needed something like two tons of NaOH in his belt, and the resulting explosion would have evaporated all the water and fried the dynamic duo to a crisp.

  2. Humor - Cartoon Physics by Seth+Finkelstein · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Take a look at Cartoon Physics, e.g.:

    Cartoon Law I

    Any body suspended in space will remain in space until made aware of its situation.

    Example

    Daffy Duck steps off a cliff, expecting further pastureland. He loiters in midair, soliloquizing flippantly, until he chances to look down. At this point, the familiar principle of 32 feet per second squared takes over.

    Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org)

  3. Re:Does this couse answers some.. by AJWM · · Score: 3, Interesting

    While the sentiments were probably circulating in fandom circles for a long time, Brodie's question was preceded by Larry Niven's classic short story/essay, Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex which appeared in his collection All The Myriad Ways over thirty years ago (1971). (That link points to what is probably a flagrant copyright violation.) Brodie's question is Niven's point four and six.

    Sigh, some people just lack an education in the classics ;-)

    --
    -- Alastair
  4. Re:Anything to get the students excited by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting
    We also did some real physics, like designing a balsa wood bridge (everone got the same materials with no rules on how you could use the materials) to take the greatest load.

    When I was in engineering school, the final exam in statics for mechanical engineers consisted of designing a flat link, out of a specified grade of aluminum plate, to connect two pins and go around some obstacles. Several hours at a drafting table were allowed. No computer access. No talking to anybody. A scaled drawing had to be turned in.

    Each student's link was then machined, by a machinist following the drawing, out of aluminum plate as specified. The link was then placed in a hydraulic testing machine and the specified load was applied.

    If the link broke, the student failed the course.

    If the link didn't break, the link was weighed, and the grade depended on the weight, lighter weights yielding higher grades.

    That's what engineering is about.

  5. Lets talk ecnomics. by Faux_Pseudo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Hmm. According to current theory there are 13 dimensions. We exist
    in 4 of them so that leaves 9 left over for all the rest. I think the
    Star Trek comics have easily surpassed 9 dimensions. Lets not even
    consider the number of dimensions an plains that The Sandman goes to.

    What I have always wondered about is the economics of comic books. Who
    read the death of Superman? Did you see all of the damage they caused
    in the final fight between the two of them in a downtown area? I have
    seen whole urban areas reduced to ruble but I never see any reference
    to insurances policies against mutants. I never here about how the
    stock market took a dive while waiting to find out if the world was
    going to be destroyed. Do sales of tabloids go up if some one claims
    to be caring $super_hero's baby? Where are all of these headlines?
    Where are do these Evil_Super_Weapons manufactures get their funding
    from? How does a contractor hide the one million dollars that it
    earned from doing a upgrade to the Bat Cave from the IRS without them
    asking questions? How does Bruce Wayne write off a million here or
    there for replacement BatMobils?
    Its things like this that caused me a long time ago to stop reading
    Super Hero comics. I much prefer the mental drama comics instead of
    the physical drama ones.

    I mentioned The Sandman above. This is a prime example of the way
    things should be done. When the moon is brought down to earth by one
    a which for a spell involving the moon goddess, Gaiman makes a
    point of mentioning that a hurricane altered its course as a result.
    When Dream goes traveling on earth he uses a old Babylonian god that
    is an expert at handling transportation issues like customs and knows
    how to work the system. When Dr. Dee makes the whole world go insane
    you see bits on TV letting you know that the whole world is indeed
    going insane and not just the people in the diner. These things
    aren't hidden in the background never to thought of like they are in
    most comics for fear that it will ruin suspension of disbelief.

    I love comics. I just wish that they didn't exist in a vacuum where
    not just the rules of physics don't apply but the rules of economics
    and media aren't even mentioned.