Yo... do you yall realize just how much power was used there?
Let's assume that bundle was bricks needed to rebuild the walls up there... to totally and utterly vaporize a single brick you need something in the neighborhood of ~40 MJ (Megajoules)
Perspective on that? Here's a few things that output that much power:
- A 1500kg (~3307lbs) car slamming into a fixed obstacle at 104km/h (65 mph).
- Setting fire to about one liter (~0.26 gal or easier to visualize ~4 cups.) of gasoline. (Gasoline has about 44MJ/kg or 123.2MJ/gal... Think about that next time you get in your car and sit over a whole tank of the stuff.)
- 10kg (~22lbs) of TNT exploding.
And that's for a
SINGLE BRICK.
She just vaporized an entire load of them. Let's be charitable and say it was only a pallet of bricks. That's ~500 or so... So we are talking...
20000/MJ.
That's uh- I- That's... well:
- 4.8 TONS (4,780kg) of TNT exploding. (Now thats a lotta damage!)
- An earthquake of 2.0 on the Richter scale, can at the low end release that much energy.
- The average US household consumes that much power over 6 MONTHS. (Remember, all that enery gets used in a fraction of a second in this case)
- Setting 455kg (160 gallons) of gasoline on fire. (Just as a fun thing, a typical large US gasoline tanker can have ~9000 gallons in them. A DOT-111 spec railroad tank car can have ~30000 gallons.)
- A "small" meteor around 1000kg (~2204lbs) going at 17km/s (~38,000mph) would release that on impact with the surface. (Scratch my earlier... NOW THIS IS A LOT OF DAMAGE.)
And she casually did this out of a mechanism concealed in her ARM.
I
really hope nobody is thinking of fucking with our MC teacher ever again in the future, or they are getting atomized in the blink of an eye.