Notebook.ai

What is the science behind the superpower of cold immunity?

Deleted user forum 7 comments schedule
person_off
Deleted user

seriously i n e e d t o k n o w goddammit
and by cold, i mean temperature. not sickness

person_off
Deleted user

I would also like to know this.

Well, if you live up North, you basically have no care for heat, and since it's always cool or cold up there, they have a lower temperature as their max temperature, and so they can withstand lower temperatures. Think like this, if a person from the south is fine with (Max)90 degrees, and starts to feel cold at (Min)60 degrees, A northerner would be like this, (Max)60 degrees, and they start to feel cold at (Min)30 degrees. (I hope this really makes sense…)

group
@Moxie group

Basically you're just used to it. I'm not totally sure if there's science but yeah…

person_off
Deleted user

oh…

@ninja_violinist

I'm not sure if this is along the lines of what you're looking for but often animals will have a special gene that allows for the production of an "anti freeze protein" during winter months (like flounders). If you transfer this idea to your superhero then they'd have a genetic shield against extreme cold.
Your cold immunity super power could either be genetic (something the person is just born with) or genetically modified (but they'd have to live in a relatively advanced slightly dystopia society in order for genetic modification of such levels to be both possible and allowed to be performed on humans).
Hope this helps!
EDIT: so I realise I probably way misinterpreted the question. Sorry

person_off
Deleted user

no no no this is perfect tysm