There is a small amount of hydrogen(H2) in the air normally.
Well, yes, but to get enough H2 to give a visible flash and audible bang when lit you'd need to filter out all of it from approximately 2m^3. That may not sound like much, but from rough consideration of entropy and information theory I'd expect it to be like half a million times as hard as ripping some water molecules apart.
 
Well, yes, but to get enough H2 to give a visible flash and audible bang when lit you'd need to filter out all of it from approximately 2m^3. That may not sound like much, but from rough consideration of entropy and information theory I'd expect it to be like half a million times as hard as ripping some water molecules apart.
Judge by physical difficulty do you, hmm? Judge by size, you might as well.
 
Judge by physical difficulty do you, hmm? Judge by size, you might as well.
Suppose you're watching a YouTube video on making paper aeroplanes. The YouTuber is like...

"This is a bit controversial, but this design uses Legal-sized paper and not just folding but some cuts as well."

Then he calls for his assistants to bring in the paper and scissors.

Only the guy with the scissors is Usain Bolt and the person bringing in the scissors is Queen Elizabeth II of England.

The YouTuber doesn't introduce them, explain how Queen Elizabeth isn't dead, or anything just goes on to make his paper aeroplane.

The MC is giving a lesson on lighting candles, specifically by producing heat with the force. Which is fine. Only they do it by igniting magically concentrated hydrogen gas with no explanation whatsoever to the students. Those students wouldn't be going, "Oh, cool. Tanya can set stuff on fire by creating friction with the force" they'd be going "WTF did she set fire to and where did it come from?".
 
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