CAN A LIGHT SABER CUT THROUGH ADAMANTIUM

COMIXALL QUESTIONS
WEEK ONE
 can a light saber cut through adamntium
this is no doubt our very first question,and the first reasonable post in the blog, by the way welcome to temiecomixall, we are all about  entertainment and fun.
ADAMANTIUM and LIGHT SABER, before the assumptions fantasies lets go to wiki.

WIKI STORY (YOU MIGHT WANNA SKIP THIS)
for kids born in 2010 till date
whats a light saber?
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lightsaber
Lightsaber with blue beam
A lightsaber
Plot element from the Star Wars franchise
Production company Lucasfilm
First appearance Star Wars (1977)
Created by George Lucas
Genre Science fiction
In-story information
Type Energy sword
Function Fencing
Stabbing
Cutting
Slashing
Welding
Melting
Heating
Deflecting
Shielding
Fighting
Burning
Lighting
Throwing
Affiliation Jedi
Sith
Knights of Ren
A lightsaber is a fictional energy sword featured in the Star Wars universe. A typical lightsaber usually consists of a metal hilt (usually around 11 inches (28 cm) in length[1]) that projects a brightly lit energy blade (usually around 3 feet (91 cm) in length).[1] The lightsaber is the signature weapon of the Jedi Order and their Sith counterparts, both of whom can use them for close combat, or to deflect blaster bolts. Its distinct appearance was created using rotoscoping for the original films, and with digital effects for the prequel and sequel trilogies. The lightsaber first appeared in the original 1977 film A New Hope and has since appeared in every Star Wars movie. In 2008, a survey of approximately 2,000 film fans found it to be the most popular weapon in film history.[2]
In its most prominent showing, the lightsaber's energy blade can cut, burn, and melt through most substances with little resistance. It leaves cauterized wounds in flesh, but can be deflected by another lightsaber blade, or by energy shields. The blade has even been used as a tool to weld metal substances. Other times, the lightsaber has been shown to cause bleeding wounds in the flesh, sometimes accompanied by burns. Some exotic saber-proof materials have been introduced in the Expanded Universe. An active lightsaber gives off a distinctive hum, which rises in pitch and volume as the blade is moved rapidly through the air. Bringing the blade into contact with another lightsaber's blade produces a loud crackle.

THIS GOT ME (

Conceptual origin

There are several literary precedents in science fiction for a "sword" of pure energy that can cut through anything, notably:

Gordon R. Dickson's "rod" from Wolfling showing the similarity it bears to a lightsaber.[3]
  • Edmond Hamilton's story Kaldar: World of Antares[4] (published 1933 in the April issue of The Magic Carpet Magazine). It was reprinted in one of Donald A. Wollheim's well-known and widely read science fiction anthologies, Swordsmen in the Sky, Ace Books 79276, 1964, and thus readily available to the science fiction reader community of the 1960s and 1970s.
  • Fritz Leiber's Gather Darkness (1943): the priests' "rods of wrath" (energy projections) only end where they cut into solid matter, so that a single duel led to numerous casualties of bystanders and charred scores across all nearby walls.[5]
  • Isaac Asimov's Lucky Starr series (1952): The force-blade is "a short shaft of stainless steel" which can project a force field that can cut through anything, making it "the most vicious weapon in the galaxy." Asimov's force-blade expands on his earlier invention of "a penknife with a force-field blade," first used in his Foundation novel (1951).[6]
  • Gordon R. Dickson's Wolfling (1969): the rod “… something in appearance like a cross between the flame of a welding torch and the arc of a static electricity charge crackled from the end of the rod … even as it burst from the end of the rod … the discharge from Galyan’s rod met the discharge from Slothiel’s head on, and the two lines of white fire splashed harmlessly into an aurora of sparks, …".[7] In a 1977 interview, Lucas stated "As a kid, I read a lot of science fiction,…I was interested in Harry Harrison…”[8] and this issue of Analog ends a Harry Harrison story[9] on the back of the page with a drawing of this duel.[7]
  • Larry Niven's Ringworld (1970): Louis Wu uses his "flashlight laser" as a sword of indefinite length.[10]
  • M. John Harrison's The Pastel City (1971): the energy baan are used by the Methven, an order of knights sworn to protect their empire.[10]


 ADAMANTIUM
Adamantium is a fictional metal alloy appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It is best known as the substance bonded to the character Wolverine's skeleton and claws. Adamantium was created by writer Roy Thomas and artists Barry Windsor-Smith and Syd Shores in Marvel Comics' Avengers #66 (July 1969), which presents the substance as part of the character Ultron's outer shell.[1] In the stories where it appears, the defining quality of adamantium is its practical indestructibility.

Contents

Etymology

The word is a pseudo-Latin neologism (real Latin: adamans, adamantem [accusative]) based on the English noun and adjective adamant (and the derived adjective adamantine) with the neo-Latin suffix "-ium." The adjective has long been used to refer to the property of impregnable, diamondlike hardness, or to describe a very firm/resolute position (e.g. He adamantly refused to leave). The noun adamant has long been used to designate any impenetrably or unyieldingly hard substance and, formerly, a legendary stone/rock or mineral of impenetrable hardness and with many other properties, often identified with diamond or lodestone.[2] Adamant and the literary form adamantine occur in works such as Prometheus Bound,[3] the Aeneid, The Faerie Queene, Paradise Lost, Gulliver's Travels, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Lord of the Rings, and the film Forbidden Planet (as "adamantine steel"), all of which predate the use of adamantium in Marvel's comics.
 NOTE: wiki posts are meant to enhance the thinking of certain fanboys who ignore facts.
 L.S
 we all know light sabers, every kid wants a light saber, the torch with a slicing laser, the light saber from the star wars series/movie can cut through anything as we have read..but can it cut through adamantium?.. these two fictional objects exists in two different fictional worlds each with coincidentally opposite attributes L.S (can cut through anything) and ADAMANTIUM (indestructible).
the L.S are used by the deadly (skillfully and neatly) dressed jedi who somehow uses torch lights to fight instead of seeing in the dark, the light sabers comes in colours...blue,green,pink,..name it..the perfect crayon selection(dont know if they come in black too).
although the light saber is a cool energy sword ,but just like any other blade the effectiveness of the L.S depends on the skills of the user. cutting through anything makes it the perfect knife for back stabbing.

ADAMANTIUM


"you cant kill me, my whole skeleton is made of adamantium" wolverine,1962 (kidding) this metal exists in the confused multi universal world of MARVEL, they are what makes the marvel's popular butcher wolverine (who spends more time on combing his spiky raised afro than sharpening his claws) almost invisible..as the adamantium is indestructible and can cut through anything including a toilet sink (x men origin) and  survived a nuclear blast in the civil war (wolverine 2015). it can even cut through stuffs like rubber and wood...(kidding) ...its just the perfect butcher knife..but oh oh..they were once ..you know sliced...by adamatium...

OH GHAAAD...WTF..MY EYES..MY CLAWS






apart from being indestructible...adamantium just makes you look so badass







so,guys tell us your thoughts...the comment box is waiting for you below and dont forget to share this post..love y'all

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