On their own, comic books are built up as science fiction. The amount of amazing stuff that can happen in them is seemingly endless, with surprises around every corner. At the end of the day, however, most see this as fiction and nothing more. There aren’t any real science facts behind comic book characters, right? Actually, there is a surprising amount of real science used in comic books. Stan Lee, the creator of some of the greatest characters in Marvel Comics, claimed he wanted to differ from DC Comics when it came to science. He wanted some science in the play to explain characters or ideology.<\/p>\n
This is why most of the characters used in Marvel have some science to back up why they are able to do things. However, just because Stan wanted the science to be in place…that does not mean the science he used is accurate. For example, gamma rays will not make someone become a Jekyll & Hyde-like monster. Even if a Hulk monster was created, slipping in and out would just be scientifically impossible. Due to Gammas basically being radiation, large exposure to it would likely give someone cancer or completely fry them to a crisp.<\/p>\n
It’s cool that science is used to explain stuff, but sadly the science was not accurate. Yet that does not mean other Marvel characters cannot be explained using real science. The same can be said for characters from DC Comics among others. The real science behind comic book characters can even make the characters that much cooler. It could be objects they use or powers they may have, science can explain a huge amount of them. Therefore, we wanted to explain 40 different examples of this and tell you where real science and science fiction come into play.<\/p>\n
Reed Richards, professionally known as Mister Fantastic, is one of the top scientists in Marvel Comics. He, along with the rest of the Fantastic Four, developed their abilities via an encounter with cosmic radiation while in space. Richards can stretch great lengths and do so in a controlled way. Thus, also allowing him to go to any length and then return to his original form. Some products can stretch great lengths and return to their original shape on the market today.<\/p>\n
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Groot is a sentient tree that is capable of moving around and speaking, though his vocabulary is quite limited. He also has super strength and can grow back entirely upon destruction. He simply has to be reborn rather than go back to the same size he was upon his passing. Is Groot possible, however? Funny enough, it’s actually possible to do a lot of the things connected to Groot. Plants on Earth can move and even attack.<\/p>\n
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Danny Rand is considered to be one of the best martial artists in the Marvel Comics Universe. Martial Arts has a very long history throughout numerous centuries. In most of these, they can do things that some find to be nearly impossible. In fact, there are some Martial Arts Masters that can break through numerous cement blocks like they’re made of cardboard.<\/p>\n
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Superman is well-known for his numerous superpowers. However, one of the most used in his arsenal is clearly x-ray vision. It was often utilized when Superman needed to see into buildings to know what possible criminals were up to. Knowing this, Lex Luthor often used lead to remain undetected by Superman in the comics.<\/p>\n
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Metabolisms are always fun to talk about. For those unaware, this is often what is pointed to when people talk about both weight gain and weight loss. However, the Mayo Clinic found that thinner people have slower metabolisms compared to faster ones among bigger people. Size ultimately dictates how fast it is due to how much energy it takes to move around.<\/p>\n
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Ben Grimm was the one most affected by the Fantastic Four cosmic incident. His entire body became, basically, rock. There are a few rare conditions possibly at play here. One is the SOST gene<\/a>, which affects the sclerostin. This is what regulates human bone growth. SOST prevents sclerostin from stopping development, causing a human to consistently develop bone mass for their entire life.<\/p>\n
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Wonder Woman is the daughter of Zeus. Her mother is an Amazon, a human, thus making Diana a Demi-God. This is why she seems to never age throughout hundreds of years. However, the Amazons overall do not seem to age here. How is this? They live on the mystical all-female island of Themyscira. The Gods helped to hide it from man as a way to help protect the Amazons. This was mostly seen as a smoke and mirrors situation, but it’s so much more.<\/p>\n
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The real facts behind comic book characters can be hard to find. However, the infamous X-Gene is pretty easy to explain. In Marvel Comics, Mutants are born with the X-Gene and typically show signs of their powers by their teenage years. They explain that this X-Gene is part of their genetic makeup, as a key to their DNA overall. Their powers then arise from them.<\/p>\n
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Stan Lee spoke about how Superman seemed to fly but the science behind how was never really explained. He felt that, despite the God-like stature of Thor and the massive unbelievable magic that goes on in his comics, there still needs to be a way to understand his flying ability. This is why Thor does not just fly off, he uses the hammer known as Mjölnir to help.<\/p>\n
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It is said that Barry Allen was conducting an experiment in his laboratory at the CCPD on the night a particle accelerator exploded. At the same time the accelerator sent its explosive wave out, the lab was also struck by lightning. All of this sounds too sciency to not be real, right? Well, the facts behind comic book characters like The Flash are not exactly as cut and dry. To be fair, it took an amended accelerator to even do this.<\/p>\n
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Magneto, a top villain in the X-Men comic books, can control metal of any kind. He can even control the contents of this within the Earth. Thus this means that he could also theoretically control Earth’s Magnetic Field<\/a>. While it is not possible to be born with an eventual ability to control metal, you can create technology that could do similar things.<\/p>\n
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Invisibility is often handled pretty well in comic books. Both Marvel & DC have characters that can turn invisible. They also are smart about this and have them typically turn invisible while their clothing does not. This means that to be completely invisible, a person has to stand around in the buff. However, invisibility is not exactly as great as some might think. When someone becomes invisible, they’d also have to be blind too.<\/p>\n
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Sue Storm, also known as the Invisible Woman, must apply the same scientific laws as others. However, this is actually a good thing. Marvel gave her a way to work around the problems of invisibility<\/a> by giving her incredible force wielding powers. The facts behind comic book characters like Sue Storm and her force wielding abilities are truly amazing.<\/p>\n
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Batman is likely one of the more realistic characters in DC Comics. Although it is unlikely one man could ever fight as long as Batman has, the overall concept of the character makes sense. All of his gadgets, pretty much, are possible to create. One of the biggest is his Batarang. This is similar to the Australian boomerang<\/a>, for which is named after.<\/p>\n
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Peter Park is bitten by a radioactive spider that somehow gave him spider-like abilities. This is technically both possible and impossible. Possible only because the radioactive nature of the spider automatically means it may be able to surpass parts of Parker’s blood. Thus, possibly have poisons take over and remove portions that block spider abilities. However, it is unlikely he would get all of these abilities. Rather, he’d just get sick.<\/p>\n
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The Space Stone, originally used in the Tesseract, is a cosmic stone that has tremendous power. In real life, we could not know if this did or did not exist. From a science perspective, this comes down to unexplainable. However, what the stone does can be analyzed. When people like Loki and Thanos use it, they are capable of doing things that make actual science sense.<\/p>\n
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On our list, this explanation may be the most theoretical. Scarlet Witch can bend reality to her will in both the movies and comics. Read the House of M<\/em> story-arc to get a grasp on how powerful she is. The question is, can someone actually warp reality? The facts behind comic book characters like Scarlet Witch are pretty amazing. We can use some physics to explain her power, but it would come down to a lot of factors.<\/p>\n
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Steve Rogers is a small man that goes into a machine one time to emerge as a much bigger & muscle-bound man eventually called Captain America. Is this possible at all? Actually, it kind of is. While we cannot speak to the numerous powers Rogers takes on like super strength, speed, agility, etc. We CAN tell you that part of what happened with Rogers is possible.<\/p>\n
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Cyclops is a popular mutant from the X-Men comics who is known mostly for his superpower of laser beams coming from his eyes. He cannot control them once he opens his eyes, which is why he wears special glasses to assist with this. The question is, can we ever see someone like him in real life? Actually, we kind of can. The facts behind comic book characters like Cyclops, however, is that some points of his powers are possible while others are not.<\/p>\n
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Ghost happens to be an amazing villain we were finally introduced to in the MCU within Ant-Man & The Wasp<\/em>. However, the character had been an Iron Man villain in the comics for years. Like Iron Man, a lot of Ghost’s main functions work with some backed up scientific fact. The character is capable of blending into environments via cloaking and drifting between objects seemingly turning into smoke while doing so.<\/p>\n
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The most common way people tend to time travel in the comics is by either running at incredibly fast speeds or shrinking down to a point where they can surpass normal time laws and then navigate through it. There are also machines used in some. Yet all of these things have one commonality. They each escape the normal laws of physics to create an opportunity to time travel.<\/a><\/p>\n
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Victor Stone sadly had an accident in a laboratory explosion that left the one great athlete almost dead. His father, a genius scientist, saved him by using some alien technology. Cyborg then came to be where he uses cybernetic body parts and even can hack into various pieces of tech around the world. Combined with his already smart side, his cybernetic brain additions were great too.<\/p>\n
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