Your rant is much appreciated =)Not even he could escape. I found a depiction that met the requirements and then showed the character has indeed been even FASTER than that. share. Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange works best with JavaScript enabled Anybody can answer There is no place in the entire Solar System (with the possible exception of the Sun's core) that Superman can't survive, at least for the length of time it takes for him to complete whatever mission or vacation he's on. site design / logo © 2020 Stack Exchange Inc; user contributions licensed under This is why Einstein tried to prove that nature would never allow them to exist. Discuss the workings and policies of this site Start here for a quick overview of the site As Elardi has already shown, black holes aren't a problem for Superman. He has closed one with his bare hands and sheer power. You are indeed where you belong. He would have been able to resist its pull if he had wished.Also, the reason he ended up on the other side of the universe was because the Black hole he entered closed after he had pulled Braniac in.Wait, so he not only survived entering a black hole, but somehow was unaffected by time dilation? I'm looking for any version of Superman from any Universe as I think, if this had ever occured, then it probably didn't happen often.Different depictions of the character show Superman being able to reach the speed of light, cross the temporal barriers preventing travel to the future or the past, and some have even allowed him the ability to escape singularities, with some degree of difficulty.
By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our To subscribe to this RSS feed, copy and paste this URL into your RSS reader. As Elardi has already shown, black holes aren't a problem for Superman.I have no idea if Beerus could survive one, but I'm not going to assume he can unless shown.Beerus is billions of times FTL, not sure if that scientifically means he can escape, but yeah.New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be castIf you love to imagine the planet-exploding battles of the fictional gods who will never be, taking pointless knowledge gathered from a life spent reading and gaming and swinging it like a gladiator's sword in discussions on reddit... then welcome home, my friend. Featured on Meta It almost never works. Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Regardless of oxygen, could Superman survive a black hole at his full power? (None of which changes the fact that this is clearly the right answer because it has screen shots. I DID NOT WRITE THE COMIC. Can he escape the black hole?Did this rather recently actually. Posted by 5 years ago. Pulled Braniac into a black hole and then Climbed out of it. It's clear that he can (theoretically) but your answer doesn't actually answer the question asked. As I understand it, black hole gravity is infinite as described in the formulas of General Theory. Millions of times faster, also depicted. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcutsCookies help us deliver our Services. Since I do science for a living, I understand this is all ENTERTAINMENT. On one hand, talk about a durability feat. (admittedly he ended up on the other side of the universe, but thats not much problem for him).Also worth adding: The reason he ended up getting sucked into the black hole was because he was deliberatly throwing himself in, taking Braniac with him to stop Braniac destroying Earth. Yes, because it is reconciling ENTERTAINMENT PHYSICS with real physics. Anybody can ask a question Stack Exchange network consists of 177 Q&A communities including
Science Fiction & Fantasy Meta By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for science fiction and fantasy enthusiasts. 09-10-2014, 12:38 AM #8 Regardless of oxygen, could Superman survive a black hole at his full power?
On the other, dafuq?In Both New 52 and Post Crisis, Superman has multiple black hole related feats:As I understand it, black hole gravity is infinite as described in the formulas of General Theory. pardon me while I express my physics pedantry, which admittedly has nothing to do with the right answer, but going faster than the speed of light @MichaelEdenfield - Always useful to know how comic book physics compares with real-life physics. Sadly, it lacks freehand circles, but noone's perfect.) And the ability to travel fast enough to transcend light means he could easily escape a black hole since the physics say not even light, the fastest thing in our understanding cannot.I don't expect anything at all. )I couldn't track down the exact right page but after the fairly recent Superman: Doomed Superman pushed Braniac into a black hole and emerged.
By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. And for you sticklers who might say these depictions of super-speed are not an indication of his ability to escape singularities (black holes), here he is escaping a weaponized black hole and collapsing it by throwing a spaceship into it. But if superman enters black hole , using method-1 , then there are very low chances that superman might survive , and pass easily through the black hole. Escape? Does the answer contradict itself? (This means to me, he must not have crossed the true event horizon because … USING COMICS PHYSICS which transcend the KNOWN LAWS OF PHYSICS, Superman IS able to cross the event horizon and escape a singularity. That's entertainment, folks.
He gets sucked into a black hole but is BA enough to survive and now they can write a whole series around him being in another dimension.