I absolutely LOVE that ship, and require someone to make a model of it.
Yeah - not bad at all! Shame he has no autopilot, as well as the radiation shielding thing. Slightly predictable, that kryptonite issue, I'd have thought.
Looked exploded to me. It was literally a shell of it's former self. About what? 25% of an outer shell was left. "Blown up" doesn't mean disitintigrated to dust.
How does that even happen? I mean outside of Flash Gordon? The planet blew to tiny pieces but a major part of the crust stays intact, even though everything under it is gone?
So, the law of gravity has been suspended? That's enough mass left over to collapse into a good-sized asteroid. What's prevented that?
The theory is - (and I don't know much about this so you should look it up) when a planet explodes the gravity caused by the planet's orbit is still in play to a degree -
There are scientific theories about planets blowing up? :lol There's nothing specifically on that because we don't know of anything that would cause a planet to spontaneously explode, but gravity does cover the results if it should happen for some reason. BTW gravity affects orbits but isn't caused by a planet's orbit, it is caused by the planet's mass.
To explode a planet you have to overcome its "binding energy", which is also a figure dependant on its mass and density. Injecting more energy than the planet's binding energy will make it come apart. How MUCH more determines how fast it comes apart; for example a Death Star pumps out many multiples of a planet's binding energy in one shot. (The Star Wars Technical Commentary pages have a good discussion of this.)
given enough time, pieces of the planet can be pulled back into a husk of the body that was once there.
Depending on the amount of material that has reached escape velocity. What might fall back might eventually create a new body the size of an asteroid, or the moon, or something like that. It won't collapse half-way then stop and form a magic suspended shell the same size as the original planet, it'll form a solid body.
It's almost like some believe our moon was created by a asteroid hitting our planet millions of years ago and launching debris into space,
Yeah. Something about as big as Mars.
The only problem with Singer using this theory is - he had Krypton's SUN explode and wipe out the planet, meaning there would be no orbital trajectory/gravity for the planet to pull back in on.
The orbit is a separate thing, some debris of the planet could still pull back together, just not as shown in the film - that would be magic. But a star blowing up should evaporate an Earthlike planet
completely.
And I seriously doubt it would have reformed something like a GIANT S on the crust. That would be like Earth exploding and reforming and Mt Rushmore is back together again.
There were ruins too, did you spot them? What WAS that giant S thing meant to be about anyway?