Hiding from a tribe of echidnas who wish to harness his power, Sonic Ben Schwartz lives out a lonely existence on Earth undetected by the people of Green Hills, Montana. Bored with his job as a small town sheriff, Tom Wachowski James Marsden dreams of joining the San Francisco Police Department until he meets Sonic and sets out to help the speedy blue space hog escape the clutches of the mad scientist Dr.
Robotnik Jim Carrey. In the live-action film, however, Sonic is shown to be traveling at a much slower rate early on in the film. Learn more. What is Sonic the Hedgehog's maximum running speed? Ask Question. Asked 9 years, 4 months ago. Active 5 years, 10 months ago. Viewed k times.
Improve this question. SQB Chad Harrison Chad Harrison 1, 3 3 gold badges 15 15 silver badges 21 21 bronze badges. Supersonic and Hypersonic are imprecise terms. Supersonic means "above sonic" and "hypersonic" is a subset of supersonic meaning "highly supersonic". Generally hypersonic generally refers to speeds above Mach 5. Like these terms, Sonic's speed is never called out as an exact quantity of distance per time, rather that "he is faster than the speed of sound".
Anything more specific than this is not quoted. Actually, Super Sonic and Hyper Sonic are states of being for STH when when he has all 7 chaos emeralds and super emeralds respectively.
Think of if as super sayin levels 1 and 2 from the Dragon Ball Z series. I realize this, but they are also references to particular velocities, this is what the names are based on why he goes super and hyper sonic instead of mega and ultra.
Quoted speed references are only as specific as "faster than sound". Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. In Sonic Unleaded the check points would report his speed in excess of miles an hour.
The Sonic Adventure DX manual lists him at least as fast as miles an hour hypersonic After that he developed light speed attacks and the ability to travel at light speed and to freeze time. The question of Sonic's top speed is seemingly unanswerable. Even the in-game answers don't agree with one another and that's to say nothing about the cartoons or comics. And, to be honest, enough has been said about Sonic's speed. What we're interested in is the consequences of traveling at those speeds.
And with his live-action debut finally hitting theaters this weekend, what better time to find out? Sonic's primary concern is not his speed, but his acceleration. Once at speed, things level out.
The G-forces level to 1 once you stop gaining speed. That's why astronauts on the space station don't splatter against the walls, despite traveling at more than 17, miles per hour while inside it. The forces inside your body when accelerating are the same as if you're already moving fast and suddenly stop. Your body doesn't care whether you're coming or going — it's all about changes in momentum.
For our purposes, we'll assume Sonic's top speed is miles per hour, the speed of sound. That's fast. Faster than any creature on Earth can go without the aid of technology. Despite common knowledge, the animal speed record is not held by the cheetah. While it's land-speed of 75 miles per hour is impressive, the animal speed record is actually held by the Peregrine Falcon with a maximum diving speed of miles per hour, fast enough to swoop down from above and punch other birds out of the sky.
Sonic's speed is more than three times as fast as that, and he accelerates to the speed of sound almost immediately. Therein lies the trouble. The G-forces during that sort of acceleration would wreak all sorts of havoc on a body.
Assuming a zero-to-sound barrier time of 1 second, Sonic would experience more than 34 G-forces on his body, albeit for a short period of time. The impact of those sorts of forces are many and none of them are good. First, he'd experience "grayout. Ultimately, he'd blackout as his blood failed to replenish the sensitive cells in his eyes. Then he'd pass out. Short of some unusual circulatory system, Sonic's heart wouldn't be able to combat the force of acceleration and would fail to supply blood to his brain.
Ironically, slowing down the acceleration makes the situation worse. Doubling the amount of time it takes him to hit Mach 1 still results in G-forces almost double what a human being can stand without losing consciousness while doubling the amount of time he'd experience those forces.
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