💾 Archived View for gemini.locrian.zone › library › SCP › 1979-comment.gmi captured on 2023-12-28 at 17:09:37. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
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Clarifying comment by Drewbear on SCP-1979’s comments page:
Quick math lesson:
**_e_** is an irrational number, which means that it never ends and never repeats, like pi. However, for the purposes of this article, we can round it to 2.71828.
The equation that it uses to determine the time differential when running on it is _**e-x**_, which can also be expressed as saying that for every 1 second (or minute) the runner experiences, the outside observer sees _**ex**_ seconds (or minutes).
At 10Â km/h (~6.2 mph), the runner experiences 1 minute, but we experience _**e10**_ minutes, which is roughly 22026 minutes. 22026 minutes divided by 60 makes roughly 367 hours. 367 hours dived by 24 makes a little over 15 days.
On the other side, let's say that the Doom Bubble has formed. It reaches 1 meter in radius after 200 seconds (3 minutes, 20 seconds) and time on the inside is running _**e.37 * 1**_ times faster, roughly 1.44 times faster. Not too bad yet. It reaches 5 meters in radius after 1000 seconds (16 minutes, 40 seconds) and time on the inside is running _**e.37 * 5**_ times faster, roughly 6.36 times faster. Oops, we're already past the danger zone. It reaches 10 meters after 2000 seconds (33 minutes, 20 seconds) and time on the inside is running _**e.37 * 10**_ times faster, roughly 40.45 times faster. Crap, that's adding up. It reaches 100 meters after 20,000 seconds (5 hours, 33 minutes, 20 seconds). Time is running _**e.37 * 100**_ times faster, roughly 11.7 * 1015 times faster.
If that last number is a little too large to get your head around, let me put it like this: at that distance/rate, for every second that passes for us, _371 million years pass inside_. And it only gets ever worse, ever faster, the larger the sphere gets. So yeah. Doom bubble.
P.S. For those of you interested, it would reach "the age of our universe for every second on the outside" somewhere between 133 and 134 meters in radius. EDIT: Derp, it's actually somewhere between 109 & 110. I had misplaced a decimal originally.