webnovel
avatar

Review Detail of BlindBandit in removed0

Review detail

BlindBandit
BlindBanditLv103yrBlindBandit

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In other words, The Daytime (Crimson) moves twice as quickly as the Night-time (Shroud) but it doesn't mean that events that are faster for one observer may not be for another so it belives the counterintuitive idea that time flows differently according to the state of the Crimson and the Shroud, it means to say that despite they are between two speeds they are still connected to each other. For example: If you're traveling from one place to another place let say 10 km away. The absolute distance will be 10 km of course, except the relative distance can be shortened, even if your a shroud, if you're using cars and the crimson is walking. the relative distance shrinks because now the time taken for you to travel over the same distance has been reduced.

altalt

removed0

NomsterWasHere

Liked by 1 people

LIKE

Replies3

NomsterWasHere
NomsterWasHereAuthorNomsterWasHere

Not quite! It's not that crimsons move twice as fast; they don't. Time itself travels faster, and the crimsons are just caught in that current of spacetime. Light itself is crimson as well, breaking the speed limit of "c" in E=mc², which is what the first line of the book is referring to mostly. Obviously that's physically impossible in the real world, though, that's why it's scifi, but that's also what makes the whole "time is faster, not only the observer" theoretically possible 🙂

BlindBandit
BlindBanditLv10BlindBandit

So that means that time dilated? Suppose a shroud traveled 1.00 year to another place. He briefly explored the area and then traveled 1.00 year back. If the shroud was 42 years old when he left, he would be 44 upon his return. Everything on the crimson side, however, would have aged a dozen more years. The crimson, if still alive, would be over 45+ years old.?

NomsterWasHere:Not quite! It's not that crimsons move twice as fast; they don't. Time itself travels faster, and the crimsons are just caught in that current of spacetime. Light itself is crimson as well, breaking the speed limit of "c" in E=mc², which is what the first line of the book is referring to mostly. Obviously that's physically impossible in the real world, though, that's why it's scifi, but that's also what makes the whole "time is faster, not only the observer" theoretically possible 🙂
NomsterWasHere
NomsterWasHereAuthorNomsterWasHere

Yes, time dilation. A Shroud walking 1 mile will get there in 20 minutes, walking 3 mph, and will have aged 20 minutes. A Crimson walking 1 mile will get there in 10 minutes relative to the shroud, but 20 minutes relative to themselves, walking 3 mph, and will have aged 20 minutes. From the shroud's perspective, the crimson aged 20 minutes in a 10 minute timespan. From the crimson's perspective, the shroud aged 10 minutes in a 20 minute time span. Unlike black holes dilating time to make you age slower than someone further away, sunlight makes you age faster than someone in the shade. Hope this clears things up! I tackle this exact phenomenon in the sidewalk observation, but maybe I could specifically mention dilation somewhere in the chapter 🤔

BlindBandit:So that means that time dilated? Suppose a shroud traveled 1.00 year to another place. He briefly explored the area and then traveled 1.00 year back. If the shroud was 42 years old when he left, he would be 44 upon his return. Everything on the crimson side, however, would have aged a dozen more years. The crimson, if still alive, would be over 45+ years old.?