ffutures: illos from the novel by George Griffith (Angel of the Revolution)
[personal profile] ffutures
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.




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?

Date: 2004-11-08 12:37 pm (UTC)
ext_12692: (Default)
From: [identity profile] cdybedahl.livejournal.com
The direct relationship between miles and days is too neat for me, but toss in an arbitrary constant (so you get days = constant * miles^3) and it'll look pretty much like stuff you actually find in physics.

December 2025

S M T W T F S
  12 3 456
7 89 10111213
14 15 16 1718 1920
21 22 2324252627
28 29 3031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 31st, 2025 09:51 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios