SpiraSpira
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- May 8, 2021
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This isn't realistic because at high speeds the aerodynamics of drag becomes controlling. Usain Bolt isn't running in a vacuum and neither is your hypothetical 12 equivalent. Consider that a linear increase in power does not equate necessarily to a linear increase in performance.Usain Bolt, the fastes human on the planet, runs at 44,72 km/hr. I'm guessing He'd be a 3-point-something based on your numbers. A 12 would mean: (Speed of sound: 1200 km/hr) 44x512= 22.500 km/hr. 22.500/1200 = Mach 18.
Hafthor Bjornsson, the strongest man, managed to deadlift 501 kilograms in 2020, breaking a world record. A 12 would mean lifting tonnes with no effort whatsoever. Perhaps even preventing jets from moving at full throttle for a light warmup in the morning. 501x512= 256.512 KG of deadlift.
A punch is several times the kinetic force of what a human can deadlift. A kick usually ranges from 500kg to 2 tonnes of kinetic force per square centimeter, and it's scientifically proven that a kick delivers 4 times the kinetic force of a punch when the same individual does it. A person with 12 strength would atomize anything they punch, probably generating vacuums and if you go full science, a black hole on impact due to matter compression.
A sneeze would create violent winds that could pop the eardrums of everyone nearby, they would shit diamonds, and if you manage to cut their skin, they'd bleed out in an instant due to their internal pressure.
Take for example some aircraft:
The F-5 is a small single seat fighter jet that has about 40 kilonewtons of thrust, it can easily achieve mach 1.5 or so at full thrust.
The SR-71 is a larger aircraft, true, but it needs over 300 kilonewons to achieve something like mach 3.2. The friction from the air is so much that the surface temperature of the SR-71's skin is over a thousand degrees celsius at such speeds. See how much more thrust it needs just to go a little faster?
This would be different if they were flying in vacuum, of course.