JasonSpidey said:The only way I can think of stopping a tornado in short order would be to evaporate that chunk of the supercell where it's forming. Which means, realistically, either some sort of nuke or some sort of enormous heat beam, presumably directed from orbit. And yeah, either of those will probably cause more harm than the tornado would.
Short of having Superman fly around it at hypersonic speeds in the opposite direction of rotation, I don't think there's much you could do.
J.A.W. said:JasonSpidey said:The only way I can think of stopping a tornado in short order would be to evaporate that chunk of the supercell where it's forming. Which means, realistically, either some sort of nuke or some sort of enormous heat beam, presumably directed from orbit. And yeah, either of those will probably cause more harm than the tornado would.
Short of having Superman fly around it at hypersonic speeds in the opposite direction of rotation, I don't think there's much you could do.
Is this view based on any scholarly research findings of greater validity - than a Marvel comic?
joncarrfarrelly said:J.A.W. said:JasonSpidey said:The only way I can think of stopping a tornado in short order would be to evaporate that chunk of the supercell where it's forming. Which means, realistically, either some sort of nuke or some sort of enormous heat beam, presumably directed from orbit. And yeah, either of those will probably cause more harm than the tornado would.
Short of having Superman fly around it at hypersonic speeds in the opposite direction of rotation, I don't think there's much you could do.
Is this view based on any scholarly research findings of greater validity - than a Marvel comic?
Dude, Superman is DC Comics, a completely different universe. B)