Superman has a lot of powers, but they’re almost never completely explained in the DC Universe.

The last time anyone made an effort to explain his powers scientifically was during the Golden Age of Comics.

This question came about when someone wanted me to explain how Superman’s flight could be explained. I realized explaining his flight was only a tiny segment of the difficulty. No one had ever bothered to explain how any of his powers could be explained in any reasonable manner. His flight is only one aspect of his amazing suite of powers. But if I were to try, I would have to reconcile his origins, the changes in how his powers were described and how they have stabilized over the decades.

Let’s go back to the Beginning:

It's SupermanThis is Kal-L, also known as the Golden Age Superman.

He ran everywhere and could reach speeds up to a hundred miles per hour. He didn’t fly. Kal-L jumped 1/8 (700 feet) of a mile when he needed to reach someplace higher than sea level. He couldn’t be hurt by anything smaller than a bursting shell from a howitzer. He was as fast as a speeding bullet, capable of catching a bullet shot from a gun. He was a strong as a locomotive, and this meant very few things could resist his incredible strength in 1939. This was the power level Superman started his career at. The source of his ability was his genetic perfection harnessed by science on Krypton.

An early page explaining the powers of SupermanThe scientific explanation for the source of Superman’s powers published in Action Comics also compared Superman’s great strength to an ant’s ability to carry hundreds of times its own weight and a grasshopper’s ability to leap great distances.

Kryptonian parents of Superman use their powers on their homeworld to leap to safetyIn some early depictions, Kryptonians had their superhuman physical prowess on their own world. In some continuities, they were from a world with a gravity anywhere from twelve to thirty times Earth’s. This would be retconned in later origin stories.

A Little History on the writers of Superman

the reign of the supermanJerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created a number of characters named Superman before they settled on the one most people know today. Both were inspired by the writers and stories popularized in pulp magazines when the two creators were growing up. They were both interested in scientific ideas as well as religious ones.

Siegel and Shuster created multiple characters named Superman. The first was a bald villain with telepathic powers, published in the short story The Reign of the Superman. A tribute was made to this first evil telepathic Superman during a recreation of the DC Universe almost 60 years later with the introduction of the Tangent Universe Superman, Harvey Dent.

This Superman had incredible mental, telepathic and telekinetic powers making him one of the most powerful beings on his world. He would even take his show on the road and try to bring order to other parallel Earths, eventually bringing him into contact with classic Superman with explosive results.

tangent universe Superman~Tangent Comics: The Superman #1 (September, 1998)

Why is this relevant?

Superman’s powers have grown significantly since the Golden Age. His host of physical abilities include increased strength and durability, super-speed, super-senses and the power of flight. The less than ideal explanation was his powers were expanded by his exposure to the light of a yellow star and some unknown aspect of his Kryptonian biology.

jor-el and lara-el discuss the fate of their son Kal-el (Superman)In the Post-Crisis reboot of Superman, Man of Steel, written by John Byrne, his origin expounds only on the premise baby Kal-el who is currently hidden within the birthing matrix safe from the tainted atmosphere of his homeworld. Instead he would develop on a world where his cells would give him the powers of a god.

Depending on the continuity, his powers vary from being slightly more powerful than his Golden Age appearances (Superman: The Animated Series) to being an immortal cosmic force for goodness (Kal-El: DC One Million).

We are never informed as to the source of these benefits. We aren’t told if it is some aspect of his biology, whether it is an organ or group of organs unique to Kryptonians. Even when they had the chance during their reboot after Crisis on Infinite Earths, the language remains vague and unspecific as to whether the source of his sun-powers was molecular, genetic or other…

Lex Luthor wants a Superman he can control

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enter image description hereFrom the Man of Steel Series, 1986

There are several continuities which indicate his powers are linked to his DNA in some undisclosed fashion. Lex Luthor attempts to clone him in the Post-Crisis Universe creating Bizarro and later the Post-Crisis Superboy.

It is the Post-Crisis Superboy where we get the only answer which attempts to make any sense. Luthor’s attempt to create his own Superman lead to the Post-Crisis Bizarro. His later attempt to clone Superman was mixed with his own DNA. This Superboy is later revised in the Young Justice television series. Post-Crisis Superboy did not have the same powers as Superman. Or he did, but they were manifested as psychic-oriented abilities.

Post-Crisis Superboy, christened Kon-El, had a measure of strength and a degree of increased durability. He lacked the visual powers (like Kal-L) and had to learn to fly. Most importantly, using his patented “tactile telekinesis” he could lift objects without them falling apart under their own stresses, in the same manner Superman does.

Real physics would have an oversized object being moved in the fashion Superman did tearing themselves apart under the stress. No ocean liners snap in half when Superman lifts them out of the water; he’s been doing this since the Golden Age! Kon-El’s ability to lift objects without falling apart (as well as performing any number of other feats) was dubbed “tactile telekinesis.” (And they would say it again and again, until you understood it and could repeat it to your friends.)

Superman lifts a yacht without breaking it in half by accident

This becomes another clue to an explanation of how Superman’s powers worked. At this point, his powers were defined, in some degree, as genetic. This meant the powers could be replicated, with advanced technologies. This also implied whatever the source for metahuman capacity possessed by the alien from Krypton, Luthor had managed to isolate some degree of the power and bond it to Human DNA.

Superboy to SupermanWhen the New52 Universe rebooted Superboy, he was still genetically-engineered, now by the mysterious NOWHERE and he retained a limited version of Superman’s powers. He still had to learn to utilize his powers including his “tactile telekinesis” in new and varied ways. Now Byrne’s attempt to put limits and at least a degree of explanation on Superman’s powers was not the last time the DC Universe would not explain how Kryptonians and to a lesser degree, Daxamites could possess these fantastic powers.

While other races had their own suites of superhuman abilities, Kryptonians (and Daxamites) appear to have powers unique to these two species in the DC Universe. No other aliens have exactly the same degree of superhuman capacity in every member of their species. Some continuities had other aliens fearing Kryptonians though none had been seen in 10,000 years. I have other theories about that…

Are we any closer to an explanation?

No. Nor will we be. Because no one at DC wants to make an explanation for how Superman’s powers work. It would cause a rift in how they have been explained, and a question as to whether it could be right, or even scientifically possible. Most scientists take the idea of a person the size of a man being able to store sufficient energy to perform even one superhuman feat performed by the Man of Steel as simply impossible. Let alone the bevy of amazing capabilities routinely performed by the Last Son of Krypton. I also suspect scientists enjoy the possibility of trying to explain his powers and to make them sensible in any degree using what we know about science.

For example: The light from a yellow star is supposedly the source of Superman’s powers. But the color of a star has very little to do with the energy it outputs. All stars are technically pretty much the same in their luminous stage. A red one or a yellow or a white are not much different from each other in any any way outside of their size, base temperature, luminosity and the lifespan of the star.

If Superman’s draws his powers from stars, he is somehow metabolizing that energy and storing it in a form he can psychically access within his body. This process enhances him to be able to survive without food or water. He can ignore the vacuum of space, absorb other harmful radiation, and become nearly invulnerable to harm. His powers allow him to lift the weight equivalent of the entire Earth and fly faster than light, completely violating, nay, he sundering the laws of physics as we understand them; technically putting out more energy than he could ever take in!

What does this mean specifically for Superman’s power of flight?

Superman’s power of flight has been described as the manipulation of gravitons (an as-yet undiscovered particle possibly associated with the forces of gravity), OR the redirection of his molecular activity in a single direction, pushing his way through the fabric of space-time, OR having access to a personal field of energy which alters fundamental forces allowing him to instinctively redirect the nature of the universe and allowing him to defy the laws of physics. They could all be true or none of them could be true. But the fundamental aspect which all of these descriptions (save the very first one for Kal-L) is their source in Superman’s mind.

Which brings us back to John Byrne

Byrne’s explanation of the Post-Crisis Superman powers as being derived from his mind’s interaction with his “biologically-generated electromagnetic field” explanation was one which wandered into the DC Universe from the Marvel Universe. I have no proof he did this intentionally, but it’s a good bet.

The alien, Gladiator, was one of Marvel’s homage/parodies of Superman. His powers are almost exactly the same and his capacity makes him one of the most formidable beings in their Universe. In a battle with the Fantastic Four, Reed Richards determines that while Gladiator is a specimen of significant physical capacity, a great deal of Gladiator’s powers are psychically-driven and to some degree require a conscious effort on his part. A momentary distraction allows the foursome (and Captain America) to defeat Gladiator when an attack penetrates his personal field. (Fantastic Four #249; 1982) This is four years before the reboot of the DC Universe in 1986.

Gladiator is a Marvel Comics Superman analog

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enter image description hereGladiator could do everything Superman could, including lifting buildings without them falling apart (ala “tactile telekinesis) and the later explanation, when ported to the DC Universe, went over well enough it became at least for a time, an accepted canon in the DC Universe. I present one last nugget of evidence which may make the lack of an explanation even more problematic.

Welcome to the Source

DC had, for a time, indicated all metahuman capacity was linked to the GodWave, a manifestation of Jack Kirby’s New Gods quasi-mystical energy well-spring, called The Source. If you had a metahuman power, no matter how small, it was a part of The Source. The major manifestation of the Source was the Source Wall, a barrier between our Universe and the New Gods older and separate Universe. Reachable only by Boom Tube, the New Gods were a species of superhuman capacities far beyond normal humanity. This was a tidy explanation give their backstory of existing before our Universe began.

While the New Gods were already incredibly powerful, one of their members, Darkseid spent his existence trying to gain access to an even purer aspect of the Source (called the Anti-Life Equation) because he believed would make him unable to be defeated. Unfortunately anyone who attempts to harness such power is imprisoned in the surface of the Source Wall to protect it from others foolish enough to try and gain its power.

Other local concentrated manifestations of the Source included:

  • The Green: a mystical source of life energy supposedly connected to growing things, discovered and used by the Swamp Thing. People connected to the Green have the ability to manipulate plants, alter their growth, change or even mutate them, giving them capacities they previously didn’t have including movement. They can also take on properties of plants if their connection is strong enough.
  • The Red: another mystical source of life energy linked to living things in the Earth’s ecosystem. The Red was a source of energy to those people who were linked to it. They could either shapechange, or aspect-change, giving themselves the physical capacities of animals, such as speed or the power of flight. Two known users of the Red were Animal Man and Vixen using a magical animal totem.
  • The Clear or the Blue: is a force which connects and pervades all aquatic life and oceanic themed elements in general within the universe. It is intended to be the force from which a number of aquatic-themed heroes or villains acquire certain abilities. The Clear is heralded by the enigmatic Parliament of Waves, an ensemble of former avatars who now reside as a counselling order to the Clear.
  • The Speed Force: The source of all speedster powers, this force allows anyone who can manipulate its energies the ability to run faster and perform feats of increase reflexes and temporal awareness. Most Flashes access this ability innately with time and experience offering them the capacity to perform even more spectacular feats of speed and energy manipulation.

Why this matters:

If indeed the Godwave and by proxy the Source are responsible for metahuman capacities in the entire DC Universe (whether through mystic or technological interfaces) Superman and every other metahuman are overriding the fundamental forces of the Universe.

Since users of the Source’s power (the New Gods and the Gods of Apokalips) tap this energy for their metahuman capacity as well it may be metahuman capacity is a side-effect of the Source’s existence and could explain why metahumans can defy the laws of physics if they are linked to an energy more potent than anything in our much younger Universe.

Does this stand in the Rebirth Universe?

The ideas of metahuman capacity linked to the Source is from the Post-Crisis, Pre-Flashpoint Universes. I don’t know if any of it has survived the demise of the New 52 Universe or whether anyone even cares to explain how metahuman powers work in any detail, let alone for Superman. Since the Rebirth Universe has some underlying secrets, especially the source of its new existence, we will have to wait to see if any information is revealed around Superman’s powers, how they work, and whether there will be any real explanation given beyond the fundamentals we already know.

We do know: In the Rebirth Universe, humanity can create and transfer metahuman capacity, giving people powers. We know this because the Chinese New Super-Man gains his powers from a secret branch of his government which studies metahuman capacity.

Shanghai Superman gets his powers

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enter image description hereWhile New Super-Man’s genesis destroys the technology necessary to give him powers and there is a degree of mortality using this technology, the implications are vast. If this is an experiment which can be replicated, there may be more metahumans than ever thought possible in this new DC Universe. We may also finally get an explanation for how superhuman capacity works and the underlying physics, biology or mechanics of the transformation.

Outside the DC and Marvel Universes:

The writer Mark Waid created a Superman-analogue called the Plutonian. As so many others have done, Waid’s Plutonian had nearly the same powers as Superman and decided he would explain them as a form of powerful psychic ability allowing the Plutonian to alter reality to his benefit.

Waid’s description of Superman’s powers and the rationale for their function was both elegant and masterful and may be the closest thing you ever get to see explaining how Superman’s powers COULD work on the comic page. If Irredeemable (2011) did nothing else, these pages were worth their weight in gold.

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enter image description hereIn Summary

Given the nature of Superman’s powers and the lack of physical explanation for the vast range and capacity of them we are forced to deduce what other writers have speculated on for some time. Superman’s powers have both a physical and mental component to them. The physical aspect is linked to some either genetic, molecular or technological element which allows him to absorb, store and manipulate a vast energy supply.

This energy is able to be manipulated by Kryptonians and Daxamites intuitively when under a star that is not red or orange. Superman’s body does have some limited durability (depending on continuity) but if he resembles a normal human male under a red star with no enhanced abilities due to gravitational differences, his powers are primarily mental in nature!

Superman’s powers are a form of limited reality-alteration, allowing himself to perform impossible feats which are similar to other manifestations of the Source including abilities such as super-speed and flight. This would explain how he could defy singularities, either holding them in his hands or escaping from their gravity wells against all laws of physics. His powers would be defined only by his willingness to believe in his ability to win the day.

superman contains a black hole

His powers often appear to be a literal manipulation of fundamental forces, allowing him to redirect the force of gravity, kinetic or electromagnetic energy away from or toward him, giving him the power of flight as well as to damage anything in his way. Because he does this intuitively, it appears to the onlooker as if he is utilizing his body to perform these feats but they are actually manifestations of his energy projection, which are invisible to the naked eye. Even he considers his powers to be physical and uses them without a complete understanding of how they work, only that they do.

Because his powers are belief and psychologically-driven in nature, it may explain why he does not do well against magical forces whose very nature is based in belief. It may also be they derive their underlying energy from the same source he does making him as vulnerable as anyone to magical forces. He is affected by exotic radiations like Kryptonite because they prevent him from utilizing his innate manipulation of reality, driving the catalyst energy (yellow sun radiation) from his body, sundering his connection to his powers violently.

We have seen him absorb other energies such as the energy of the firepits of Apokalips, so we know his cells can be made compatible with energy from the New Gods Universe which are also patterned on the Source.

In Conclusion

Based on all of information we’ve gathered thus far, Superman is a fuse to a far greater capacity, possibly even a conduit to the Source itself which makes him capable of performing incredible feats, but it is his access to yellow sun radiation which opens the portal to the greater energies. When his yellow radiation is depleted, he loses access to the more powerful energies because he cannot manipulate them without solar energy support.

Ultimately, I do not hold my breath any writer will be so bold as to try and create a unified theory of metahuman capacity in the DC Universe. Such a theory would try to put a name to how metahumans perform their feats but I would love to see someone try. Defining the fundamental aspect of flight for Superman, the Martian Manhunter, Wonder Woman and many others would be the least of the things such a work could encompass.

-30-

Answer Man Thaddeus Howze
Thaddeus Howze
Thaddeus Howze

Thaddeus Howze is an award-winning writer, editor, podcaster and activist creating speculative fiction, scientific, political and cultural commentary from his office in Hayward, California.
Thaddeus’ speculative fiction has appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals. He has published two books, ‘Hayward’s Reach’ (2011), a collection of short stories and ‘Broken Glass’ (2013) an urban fantasy novella starring his favorite paranormal investigator, Clifford Engram.