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How much faster than a speeding bullet is superman?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)How Much Should I Make?How much the shopkeeper loses?A simple Question. How much “faster” is A than B as a percentage figure?understanding how multiplying a number by itself and than using the result for division gives you a consistent resultHow much information is missing?How much does the owner lose?How to calculate what % faster $x$ is than $y$Two cars one $10$mph faster than other start at same point and travel in opposite directions.Sophia washes pots in 30 minutes. Her mother takes 15 minutes to wash them. How much time will it take if they wash them together?I want $2.5 million saved when I retire at 65. How much do I need to save every month to achieve this goal?










1












$begingroup$


I need some help with a problem I want to solve.



You have a gunman standing 50 ft away from a human target. According to google, the average bullet travels at 2,500 fps. If my math is correct (debatable, my math skills are kind of sad) this gives the target .02 seconds or 20 ms to react before the bullet reaches them.



Also according to google, The average reaction time for humans is 0.25 seconds to a visual stimulus, 0.17 for an audio stimulus, and 0.15 seconds for a touch stimulus (Logically speaking, I believe this is the time between the initial stimulus and the time motion is initiated, not completed). I'm not sure (could not find) the amount of time would take this average human to actually finish moving their hand into a position to block the bullet's path if it is headed directly for the person's heart. Edit: couldn't find numbers online, so I found a victim and measured him. He is 6 ft tall, his arm is about 30 inches long from finger-tips to shoulder, and the straight-line distance between his hand and the approximate area of his heart was about 25 inches (2.08333 ft). So let's assume the hand needs to cover a distance of about 25 inches. I also found this statement: "The human hand can move 150 MPH(.04 miles per second which equals 215 feet per second" here: http://highdeas.com/lifestyle/This_is_insane_but_I_cant_disprove_it (but there was no reference to say where the number came from).



Edit 2: I checked the number with an online calculator and it would seem that 150 mph is actually 220 fps, not 215.



Obviously, average Joe (and even exceptional Bob) are far to slow to have a prayer of putting their hand in the way of a bullet (and even if they did, the bullet would rip a hole in their hand).



What I want to know is if it is possible to determine how many times faster than normal human reaction time Superman would need to be in order to block a bullet with his hand.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 1:01











  • $begingroup$
    Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:02










  • $begingroup$
    @Ertxiem edited the original post
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:17










  • $begingroup$
    Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Apr 1 at 1:36










  • $begingroup$
    @fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:31















1












$begingroup$


I need some help with a problem I want to solve.



You have a gunman standing 50 ft away from a human target. According to google, the average bullet travels at 2,500 fps. If my math is correct (debatable, my math skills are kind of sad) this gives the target .02 seconds or 20 ms to react before the bullet reaches them.



Also according to google, The average reaction time for humans is 0.25 seconds to a visual stimulus, 0.17 for an audio stimulus, and 0.15 seconds for a touch stimulus (Logically speaking, I believe this is the time between the initial stimulus and the time motion is initiated, not completed). I'm not sure (could not find) the amount of time would take this average human to actually finish moving their hand into a position to block the bullet's path if it is headed directly for the person's heart. Edit: couldn't find numbers online, so I found a victim and measured him. He is 6 ft tall, his arm is about 30 inches long from finger-tips to shoulder, and the straight-line distance between his hand and the approximate area of his heart was about 25 inches (2.08333 ft). So let's assume the hand needs to cover a distance of about 25 inches. I also found this statement: "The human hand can move 150 MPH(.04 miles per second which equals 215 feet per second" here: http://highdeas.com/lifestyle/This_is_insane_but_I_cant_disprove_it (but there was no reference to say where the number came from).



Edit 2: I checked the number with an online calculator and it would seem that 150 mph is actually 220 fps, not 215.



Obviously, average Joe (and even exceptional Bob) are far to slow to have a prayer of putting their hand in the way of a bullet (and even if they did, the bullet would rip a hole in their hand).



What I want to know is if it is possible to determine how many times faster than normal human reaction time Superman would need to be in order to block a bullet with his hand.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 1:01











  • $begingroup$
    Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:02










  • $begingroup$
    @Ertxiem edited the original post
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:17










  • $begingroup$
    Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Apr 1 at 1:36










  • $begingroup$
    @fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:31













1












1








1





$begingroup$


I need some help with a problem I want to solve.



You have a gunman standing 50 ft away from a human target. According to google, the average bullet travels at 2,500 fps. If my math is correct (debatable, my math skills are kind of sad) this gives the target .02 seconds or 20 ms to react before the bullet reaches them.



Also according to google, The average reaction time for humans is 0.25 seconds to a visual stimulus, 0.17 for an audio stimulus, and 0.15 seconds for a touch stimulus (Logically speaking, I believe this is the time between the initial stimulus and the time motion is initiated, not completed). I'm not sure (could not find) the amount of time would take this average human to actually finish moving their hand into a position to block the bullet's path if it is headed directly for the person's heart. Edit: couldn't find numbers online, so I found a victim and measured him. He is 6 ft tall, his arm is about 30 inches long from finger-tips to shoulder, and the straight-line distance between his hand and the approximate area of his heart was about 25 inches (2.08333 ft). So let's assume the hand needs to cover a distance of about 25 inches. I also found this statement: "The human hand can move 150 MPH(.04 miles per second which equals 215 feet per second" here: http://highdeas.com/lifestyle/This_is_insane_but_I_cant_disprove_it (but there was no reference to say where the number came from).



Edit 2: I checked the number with an online calculator and it would seem that 150 mph is actually 220 fps, not 215.



Obviously, average Joe (and even exceptional Bob) are far to slow to have a prayer of putting their hand in the way of a bullet (and even if they did, the bullet would rip a hole in their hand).



What I want to know is if it is possible to determine how many times faster than normal human reaction time Superman would need to be in order to block a bullet with his hand.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




I need some help with a problem I want to solve.



You have a gunman standing 50 ft away from a human target. According to google, the average bullet travels at 2,500 fps. If my math is correct (debatable, my math skills are kind of sad) this gives the target .02 seconds or 20 ms to react before the bullet reaches them.



Also according to google, The average reaction time for humans is 0.25 seconds to a visual stimulus, 0.17 for an audio stimulus, and 0.15 seconds for a touch stimulus (Logically speaking, I believe this is the time between the initial stimulus and the time motion is initiated, not completed). I'm not sure (could not find) the amount of time would take this average human to actually finish moving their hand into a position to block the bullet's path if it is headed directly for the person's heart. Edit: couldn't find numbers online, so I found a victim and measured him. He is 6 ft tall, his arm is about 30 inches long from finger-tips to shoulder, and the straight-line distance between his hand and the approximate area of his heart was about 25 inches (2.08333 ft). So let's assume the hand needs to cover a distance of about 25 inches. I also found this statement: "The human hand can move 150 MPH(.04 miles per second which equals 215 feet per second" here: http://highdeas.com/lifestyle/This_is_insane_but_I_cant_disprove_it (but there was no reference to say where the number came from).



Edit 2: I checked the number with an online calculator and it would seem that 150 mph is actually 220 fps, not 215.



Obviously, average Joe (and even exceptional Bob) are far to slow to have a prayer of putting their hand in the way of a bullet (and even if they did, the bullet would rip a hole in their hand).



What I want to know is if it is possible to determine how many times faster than normal human reaction time Superman would need to be in order to block a bullet with his hand.







recreational-mathematics






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Apr 1 at 4:26







MarielS

















asked Apr 1 at 0:51









MarielSMarielS

1084




1084











  • $begingroup$
    There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 1:01











  • $begingroup$
    Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:02










  • $begingroup$
    @Ertxiem edited the original post
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:17










  • $begingroup$
    Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Apr 1 at 1:36










  • $begingroup$
    @fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:31
















  • $begingroup$
    There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 1:01











  • $begingroup$
    Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:02










  • $begingroup$
    @Ertxiem edited the original post
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 1:17










  • $begingroup$
    Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Apr 1 at 1:36










  • $begingroup$
    @fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:31















$begingroup$
There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 1:01





$begingroup$
There are some data missing for me to give an answer. I would need to know the top speed of the hand and the expected distance between the hand and the heart. Throwing some numbers in, if he average human would take less than a second to finish his/her defence movement (think of martial arts specialists), then Superman would need to be around 50 times faster.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 1:01













$begingroup$
Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 1:02




$begingroup$
Thanks, I'll look up a few more things an add as much as I can find
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 1:02












$begingroup$
@Ertxiem edited the original post
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 1:17




$begingroup$
@Ertxiem edited the original post
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 1:17












$begingroup$
Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
$endgroup$
– fleablood
Apr 1 at 1:36




$begingroup$
Not much to do here. Your calculations of the bullet taking $0.02$ secons is correct and if you conversion of $150 mph$ to fps is correct then then $frac 25215=0.116$ seconds. Even with instantaneous reflex it can't be done, not if superman has normal hand velocity. But if his reflex is $k$ times faste and his speed is $m$ then you need $0.15/k + 0.116/m = 0.02$. If superman is $n$ times faster in all thing you need $0.15/n+0.116/n=0.266/n=0.02$ or superman is $13.3$ times faster in all ways.
$endgroup$
– fleablood
Apr 1 at 1:36












$begingroup$
@fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 2:31




$begingroup$
@fleablood: I did almost the same approach you did, but you also considered in separate the two different ways of being faster, nice! Regarding the computations, I saw a small mistake: you divided $25$ inches by $215$ feet per second.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 2:31










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0












$begingroup$

So, from your data, it seems that the average human would take around $0.25s$ from the moment he/she saw the gun firing to start the movement.



Then, the same human would need at least $0.01s$ to move the hand in front of the heart, assuming that the hand can immediately move at top speed.



Therefore, average humans would complete their defence movement in over $0.26s$ after they saw the gun firing.



Superman would need to be 13 times faster to do the same thing in $0.02s$, since $frac0.260.02 = 13$.



By the way, looking at a related scientific article we can see that the reaction times of young male adults is around $0.226s$, so it's close to the estimates in here.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 2:22










  • $begingroup$
    Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:26











  • $begingroup$
    Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 4:21











  • $begingroup$
    So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 5:00










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 12:30












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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0












$begingroup$

So, from your data, it seems that the average human would take around $0.25s$ from the moment he/she saw the gun firing to start the movement.



Then, the same human would need at least $0.01s$ to move the hand in front of the heart, assuming that the hand can immediately move at top speed.



Therefore, average humans would complete their defence movement in over $0.26s$ after they saw the gun firing.



Superman would need to be 13 times faster to do the same thing in $0.02s$, since $frac0.260.02 = 13$.



By the way, looking at a related scientific article we can see that the reaction times of young male adults is around $0.226s$, so it's close to the estimates in here.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 2:22










  • $begingroup$
    Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:26











  • $begingroup$
    Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 4:21











  • $begingroup$
    So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 5:00










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 12:30
















0












$begingroup$

So, from your data, it seems that the average human would take around $0.25s$ from the moment he/she saw the gun firing to start the movement.



Then, the same human would need at least $0.01s$ to move the hand in front of the heart, assuming that the hand can immediately move at top speed.



Therefore, average humans would complete their defence movement in over $0.26s$ after they saw the gun firing.



Superman would need to be 13 times faster to do the same thing in $0.02s$, since $frac0.260.02 = 13$.



By the way, looking at a related scientific article we can see that the reaction times of young male adults is around $0.226s$, so it's close to the estimates in here.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 2:22










  • $begingroup$
    Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:26











  • $begingroup$
    Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 4:21











  • $begingroup$
    So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 5:00










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 12:30














0












0








0





$begingroup$

So, from your data, it seems that the average human would take around $0.25s$ from the moment he/she saw the gun firing to start the movement.



Then, the same human would need at least $0.01s$ to move the hand in front of the heart, assuming that the hand can immediately move at top speed.



Therefore, average humans would complete their defence movement in over $0.26s$ after they saw the gun firing.



Superman would need to be 13 times faster to do the same thing in $0.02s$, since $frac0.260.02 = 13$.



By the way, looking at a related scientific article we can see that the reaction times of young male adults is around $0.226s$, so it's close to the estimates in here.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$



So, from your data, it seems that the average human would take around $0.25s$ from the moment he/she saw the gun firing to start the movement.



Then, the same human would need at least $0.01s$ to move the hand in front of the heart, assuming that the hand can immediately move at top speed.



Therefore, average humans would complete their defence movement in over $0.26s$ after they saw the gun firing.



Superman would need to be 13 times faster to do the same thing in $0.02s$, since $frac0.260.02 = 13$.



By the way, looking at a related scientific article we can see that the reaction times of young male adults is around $0.226s$, so it's close to the estimates in here.







share|cite|improve this answer












share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer










answered Apr 1 at 1:45









ErtxiemErtxiem

772212




772212











  • $begingroup$
    What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 2:22










  • $begingroup$
    Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:26











  • $begingroup$
    Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 4:21











  • $begingroup$
    So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 5:00










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 12:30

















  • $begingroup$
    What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 2:22










  • $begingroup$
    Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 2:26











  • $begingroup$
    Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 4:21











  • $begingroup$
    So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
    $endgroup$
    – MarielS
    Apr 1 at 5:00










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
    $endgroup$
    – Ertxiem
    Apr 1 at 12:30
















$begingroup$
What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 2:22




$begingroup$
What if he started moving when he first heard, rather than saw, the gun fire? (oh boy, I just realized that the sound, and the light from the muzzle flash hitting the eye, both also take time to travel... but maybe for the sake of simplicity I should just ignore this)
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 2:22












$begingroup$
Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 2:26





$begingroup$
Then Superman would have to be $frac0.17+0.010.02=9$ times faster. It's still around $10$ times faster, so not much of a difference, considering that we are using approximate values.
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 2:26













$begingroup$
Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 4:21





$begingroup$
Neat. Thank you. I looked up the speed of sound (1125.328 fps) and it is actually slower than the bullet. So Superman is going to have to use his eyes! Fortunately for him, if my calculations are correct, light crosses a 50 ft distance in about 5.09 one hundred millionths of a second, which isn't going to slow him down much!
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 4:21













$begingroup$
So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 5:00




$begingroup$
So, revising your equation for what I discovered is a slightly more realistic (maybe?) time of 0.03 seconds for the hand movement, I believe that results in Superman needing to be 14 times faster.
$endgroup$
– MarielS
Apr 1 at 5:00












$begingroup$
Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 12:30





$begingroup$
Yes, it would result in 14 times faster. By the way, if you think it's appropriate, you can accept my answer (there is a green button).
$endgroup$
– Ertxiem
Apr 1 at 12:30


















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