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My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Fanfiction
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YEY
it's only one letter, but i'm dying from laughter
9152714
Oh my god thank you for pointing that out, it had me cackling like a mad man. I'm debating on fixing it buuuuuut I probably should.
Hey would you "like at that", flushing out how this boy works
Is it supposed to be: "look at that"?
9152936
That it is, thanks for pointing it out, my laptop doesn't really like to work with me on words. Some keys are sticky and the auto correct put into it is funky. I should pick up a new by the end of this month
...
Great work
Glad to see that this story updated and even though there were a few errors here and there throughout the chapter, I thought that it was solid.
P.S. Congrats on becoming a dad!
ZA WARUDO
i.pinimg.com/originals/14/87/0c/14870ce7b4596c7ea994faa9781becba.png
Not too bad. The absolute zero bit sets me off though. I'm going to play it off as A, they don't know what they're talking about, or B, the rules of physics are different here, or C, they don't know what happens before they hit absolute zero.
I'm quite a science geek, so it just sets me off a bit. If you want some fun knowledge about it, watch this video abouf fhe Bose Einstein Condensate. I think that, while he May be able to reach absolute zero, it wouldn't be as catastrophic as they make it out to be unless they're using the energy from everything to keep it cold(some magic shenanigans like his cold fire fhat burns cold might try to make it spread.)
It would probably cause a really cold explosion (size depends on the space that was at 0) but even the BEC mentioned earlier would be infinitely hotter, so it takes just a small amount of energy to make it not absolute zero.
But whatever he froze, it probably wouldn't exist anymore.
Theorizing about this stuff is fun. I've probably just made a mountain of a molehill with this, and it probably isn't even mentioned again in the story. Oh well. Good read. Congrats on the kid too!
Cryosleep is in closed capsules depicted... Wonder if that ever will be a thing...
Magnificent chapter
... I don't have to mention that the science brought up in this chapter is absolute bogus, right? :D
I mean, come on. Just because something has no energy, it doesn't mean it has infinite capacity for energy. Even if you brought a planet to absolute zero, it'd still tank only as much energy as it can store, up to normal capacity. The entire universe would, obviously, be colder for it... but considering how absolutely humongous the universe is, the average difference would likely not even register. Hell, the most-consumed source of energy - the nearest star - would not even notice.
Energy cannot be created nor destroyed - only transformed, and always at a loss. In order for the proposed to happen, you'd have to find a way to punch a "hole", an energy sink, and expel that energy somewhere that isn't in-universe.
As for "freezing" time...
thatistheoretically plausible, so long as we're talking planetaryperceptionof it - but he'd have to affect the entire planet in such an extreme way that life would likelygo extinctbefore he made a perceptible difference. And even then someone would still figure out thatsomethingis up, because the sun wouldn't be where it'ssupposedto be. Worse still, the one travelling would still experience the whole "normal" travel time.Actually, scratch that. It still doesn't make a lick of sense, no matter how I force it. Just, no.But magic, I guess, so meh, whatever.
10821057
Not very likely, I think... Generation ships are probably more our speed, if anything. Otherwise, I'd expect increased speeds instead... though both present unique and challenging problems. Even travelling at 0.99999999999999999 the speed of light - while an insane technical feat - isn't all that useful, when interstellar (forget intergalactic...) distances are concerned. Space is absolutely ginormous: the nearest star is 4.24 light years from us; the closest planetary system is 4.37 ly, and the nearest planet that might be "good to go" as-is* is 23 ly away.
And getting you into cryosleep for that kind of a journey is the easy part - induced coma, special fluids, tons of hardware per person (to bring the temperature down quickly and keep it tightly regulated). But... the human body is too big to effectively bring out of the sort of cryosleep you're thinking of (the sort that'll allow you to sleep for months, and possibly even hundreds of years). You either can't deliver enough heat into its core (and so your body dies of hypothermia), or you end up boiling the skin off outright (a'la microwaving a TV dinner). We're just too bulky.
Sure, you can survive for minutes at a time in cryogenic conditions, but... in order to reach the nearest interesting planet, at our best speed (currently 430 000 miles per hour) would take us something like 37 thousand years.
* Gliese 667 Cc