Forthcoming Cruises: Triassic-Cretaceous
TS Corinthic, Captain Richard Thorne RNVR, White Star Line:
Departs for a four-week cruise to the Triassic-Cretaceous oceans, calling in at London (1588 AD), Vinland (1000 AD), Herculaneum (75 AD; day trip to Pompeii available), Africa (500,000 BC; hunting trips available), Triassic-Cretaceous (circa 150 Million BC).
Launched in 1902, the Corinthic is a luxurious new liner of 12,251 tons capable of 14 knots and equipped with the latest Ferguson Chronatron® time displacer and a Babbage-Williamson navigational engine. Excluding stops en-route and any delays to manoeuvre the journey to the Triassic-Cretaceous seas will take approximately a week, with a week spent sight-seeing and hunting in this period before the return journey. Currently all first-class accommodation is reserved, but second and third-class cabins are still available and may be booked via Thomas Cook & Sons and other reputable agents.
Corinthic will depart from pier 7, Southampton, at 2.00 PM on Tuesday 11th May.
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Okay - showing my crappy maths here. What I need here is a SIMPLE mathematical formula that'll relate the distance travelled in time to the distance at sea, possibly an exponential curve or close to it. The way I want it to work is that you start off slowly but accelerate. A few months in the first few miles, a few years in the next few, and so forth, say 200 million years in a week, and the beginning of the universe in a month or two (assuming you could keep sailing). I can simply give figures that suit me, but it'd be better if I could give a formula that can be used without too much messing around. Any suggestions?
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Date: 2004-11-08 12:08 pm (UTC)However, I want to book now.
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Date: 2004-11-08 01:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 12:19 pm (UTC)How about:
1 mile = 1 day
8 miles = 512 days = 1.5 years
16 miles = 4096 days = 12 years
32 miles = 30,000 days = 100 years
64 miles = 750 years
128 miles = 6000 years
256 miles = 50,000 years
512 miles = 400,000 years
1024 miles = 3 million years
2048 miles = 25 million years
4096 miles = 400 million years
8192 miles = 3.2 billion years
16536 miles = 25 billion years -- so back before the big bang.
Time in days is the cube of distance in miles (or kilometres if you want a slightly faster progression).
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Date: 2004-11-08 12:31 pm (UTC)Okay, let's say I go with that - would the RPG people reading this think that the relationship sounded a bit artificial, or would you be willing to suspend your disbelief?
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Date: 2004-11-08 12:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 12:40 pm (UTC)f(10) = 1
f(100) = 10
f(360) = 1000
f(2500) = 2*10^8
f(10,000) = 10^10
To start with, let's try to find a function where f(10) = 1 and f(10,000) = 10^10. This gives us log(f(10^1) = 0 and log(f(10^4) = 10.
Set d = 10^x, i.e. x = log(d)
log(f(d)) = log(f(10^x)) = 3.33(x-1)
-> f(10^x) = 10^(3.33(x-1))
-> f(d) = 10^(3.33(log(d)-1))
Let's try this out.
f(10) = 1 yr
f(100) = 2150 yrs
f(360) = 154,000 yrs
f(2500) = 98.4 M yrs
f(10,000) = 10 B yrs
...which is sort of what we want, but if anything doesn't rise steeply enough.
How about making the inner function itself rise more steeply. Let's have
log(f(d)) = log(f(10^x)) = ((x-1)^2)+1
(still has 1 -> 1 and 4 -> 10, but with a curved rise in between). Now we get:
-> f(10^x) = 10^(((x-1)^2)+1)
-> f(d) = 10^(((log(d)-1)^2)+1)
Now we get:
f(10) = 1 yr
f(100) = 100 yrs
f(360) = 2640 yrs
f(2500) = 5.62 M yrs
f(10,000) = 10 B yrs
Wa-hey! Just what you're after, I think.
So, the formula for time T in years gone back over distance d nautical miles is
T = 10^(((log(d)-1)^2)+1)
and conversely
d = 10^(sqrt(log(T)-1)+1)
Hope that helps,
MC
no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:51 pm (UTC)MC
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Date: 2004-11-08 02:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 02:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 01:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 02:18 pm (UTC)Cyanobacteria first started producing oxygen about 2.7 billion years ago, but it took about 2 billion years to get the atmosphere up to its current oxygen levels. Multicellular life first appeared about 1.2 billion years ago. Animal life, and green plants appeared on land about 500 million years ago.
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Date: 2004-11-08 03:07 pm (UTC)Time displacement = (tonnage/4050)*distance³
which gives a "bigger is better" effect and adds an easily-grasped complication to the calculation which gamers ought to like. It's no good just being fast, it has to be a BIG ship or you're just too slow.
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Date: 2004-11-08 05:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-08 05:24 pm (UTC)After 15 minutes - 26.24 years
After an hour - 1,679.22 years
After a day - 23,213,470.23 years
After 2 days - 185,707,761.81 years
After 3 days - 626,763,696.10 years
After a week - 7.96 billion years
etc.
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Date: 2004-11-08 08:13 pm (UTC)What is the distance measured relative to? (Do ocean currents have an effect?)
And will you be ignoring "snowball Earth"?
Hm. If continental drift happens in your setting, voyages at higher speeds get interesting :-)
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Date: 2004-11-09 12:03 am (UTC)I was waiting for someone to spot that one. There are all sorts of problems, that's just one of them.
As for hitting things - still working on that.
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Date: 2004-11-09 01:25 am (UTC)Can't read some text by the way, the picture is covering it.
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Date: 2004-11-09 01:28 am (UTC)*Goes off singing*
I'm standing on a planet, a planet that's evolving
and revolving at nine hundred miles and hour....
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Date: 2004-11-09 09:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-10 01:00 am (UTC)