Was Crocodile stronger at Marineford? Or was he holding back in Alabasta?

 During the Alabasta arc, Crocodile displayed a level of power that was initially considered overwhelming by the Straw Hat Pirates. He possessed the Logia-type Devil Fruit called the Suna Suna no Mi (Sand-Sand Fruit), which granted him the ability to control and transform into sand. He had a reputation as a Shichibukai and controlled the desert kingdom of Alabasta from the shadows. His strength was showcased through his battles with Luffy and others. At Marineford, Crocodile was present as part of the war that took place at Marine Headquarters. While he did participate in the battle, he didn't display the same level of dominance as some other powerful characters present. This has led fans to speculate that he might not have been as strong as initially portrayed in Alabasta. It's important to note that power scaling and character abilities can be subject to interpretation and development by the author. Oda often keeps details deliberately open-ended to keep the story intriguing.

James Webb telescope reveals millions of galaxies


There were multiple times more systems very much like our own Milky Way in the early Universe than recently suspected.

This astronomical knowledge comes from one of the primary investigations of pictures caught by Nasa's new James Webb Space Telescope.

One of its creators, Prof Christopher Conselice from the University of Manchester, UK, said that Webb could "focus in on the early Universe".

This yielded experiences about objects in space that "we knew existed yet failed to see how and when they framed".

Plate systems overwhelm the "universe populace" today," the analyst made sense of.

"Our own universe is a circle, Andromeda (our closest neighbor, which is 2.5 million light-years from Earth) is a plate.


"3/4 of adjacent systems are circles, yet it was believed that they shaped late in the development of the Universe," he told BBC News.


Nasa telescope takes really sharp perspective on early universe

Nasa space telescope conveys terrific pictures

A $10bn machine looking for the finish of murkiness

That was before the James Webb Space Telescope gave stargazers a view such a long ways back in time.


The review, which has been distributed on a preprint server, meaning it still can't seem to be peer checked on by different researchers in the field, utilized the main picture set free from the telescope.


This picture shows a forefront group of worlds called SMACS 0723. The gravity of this extraordinary mass of articles has amplified the illumination of cosmic systems behind the scenes, in far off Universe, making them apparent interestingly. A portion of these universes existed an only a short time after the Big Bang.



Webb, with its expansive brilliant mirror and super-delicate infrared instruments, can determine their shapes and count them.

"We realized we would see things Hubble didn't have the foggiest idea. Yet, for this situation we're seeing things in an unexpected way," said Prof Conselice, who will introduce a portion of his revelations on Saturday 23 July at the Bluedot Festival at Jodrell Bank in Cheshire.

The Universe is around 13.8 billion years of age, so the pictures that the JWST is catching are looks at the cycles that framed stars and planets well before our own appeared.

"These are the cycles we want to comprehend to figure out our beginnings," said Prof Conselice.

"This may be the main telescope ever," he added. "Basically since Galileo's."

James Webb is a joint exertion between the American, European and Canadian space offices, with Nasa in the number one spot.




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