Democratus
Adventurer
This is totally where I'd hoped this thread would go! 

Well, you COULD assume that the block stops almost completely to start with. Suppose it ejected 1/20th of the volume of the cube? Given that cube has less than 1/2 the density of rock, then it would have to have 40x the velocity. We said 8 meters/sec for the block, so 320 m/sec! Even if I'm generous by an order of magnitude, the stuff is moving at 40 mph roughly. It should manage to travel a pretty fair distance! It COULD well be traveling at several HUNDRED mph. At that point, it is likely to simply travel as far as whatever wall is in the way, underground.Haha, and it gets a lot worse from there . Gels are non-linear fluids. The maths behind their motion gets very heavy with tensors and co and contravariance, and other such matters.
Re: Your reply to my reply. Yeah, there would be an initial splat, I'm guessing a pretty violent one, with the block stopping very suddenly and a narrow edge of GC material being forced upwards along the narrow edge. Afterwards, probably not very much, just a slow ooze of the GC material up around the edge. Maybe nothing at all, depending on how much shear(?) is needed for the GC material to stop acting like a solid. The block might not create enough pressure to get the GC material to flow.
For the initial impact, I'm thinking the impact time will be a lot less than 1/10 of a second. But that just adds more to the idea of there being an initial violent splat. If there were a simple transfer of energy and momentum (basically, making the GC material a big seesaw), we could estimate how quickly the GC material that is ejected is moving. But, I have no sense of how much of the energy and momentum are transferred to the surrounding rock (or back to the rock that was dropped).
TomB
Of course, the farther it spreads the less dense the spray. Even if we assume dead cube stuff is still harmful (after being subjected to a sudden, massive pressure change no less) at some point it's going to be too finely dispersed to be dangerous.Well, you COULD assume that the block stops almost completely to start with. Suppose it ejected 1/20th of the volume of the cube? Given that cube has less than 1/2 the density of rock, then it would have to have 40x the velocity. We said 8 meters/sec for the block, so 320 m/sec! Even if I'm generous by an order of magnitude, the stuff is moving at 40 mph roughly. It should manage to travel a pretty fair distance! It COULD well be traveling at several HUNDRED mph. At that point, it is likely to simply travel as far as whatever wall is in the way, underground.
If you call your show Trapbusters, and you have an electric personality and high-enough Charisma score, you will have an avid viewer in me.I'm still not seeing a single scenario which avoids all four of the failure modes for the Yellow Mold that I described. There's just no way around the facts that it only has a 50% chance to go off, and only hits on top of the block (assuming this ludicrous magic rope, magic pulley scenario which is not in the original somehow results in an impact strong enough to trigger it, which is questionable).
Honestly at this point I feel like we should be calling Mythbusters.
Hell, maybe we should do a Mythbusters of old-skool traps? I.e. first we analyze them exactly as written, and probably a lot of them fail, but then we figure out how we could make them work.
I do!Nobody ever explains how the monsters on level 2 manage to get food and such, they just do. This is a given.
This type of analysis doesn't work either, due to the issue of "choked flow". You can't simply make an opening smaller in order to increase the flow velocity arbitrarily high. I don't know enough fluid dynamics to calculate whether the flow would be choked here, but given the 99-1 ratio you've created, I'd be surprised if it wasn't choked.Based on the relative cross sections (99 sq ft vs 1 sq ft), the material must be ejected at 99x the speed of the descending cube. That is, initially, 25 f/s * 99, about 2475 f/s, or about 1700 mph, decreasing to zero as the block is slowed. This speed is absurdly high. I expect that losses due to an initial shock wave and due to viscous heating would reduce this speed.
Yeah, if the flow rates are beyond a certain point. So, I previously approached this as a momentum transfer, with the assumption that (at least as a first approximation) all the momentum of the falling block was transferred to the cube. However we can approach it in a completely other way which is probably even better.This type of analysis doesn't work either, due to the issue of "choked flow". You can't simply make an opening smaller in order to increase the flow velocity arbitrarily high. I don't know enough fluid dynamics to calculate whether the flow would be choked here, but given the 99-1 ratio you've created, I'd be surprised if it wasn't choked.
Physically, if the opening is too small, the post-impact velocity of the block will simply be limited by the maximum flow rate of the dead cube stuff.
Whilst I don't buy the physics you're going on, even in this scenario, the spray would be pretty much entirely vertical. It would hit the ceiling then spray back down, so you'd probably get the 5' squares on the two shaved sides, and nowhere else.Granted, it is probably only happening for a very brief time. Pemerton stated 1/10th of a second for his pressure calculation, so it is a short, but high volume, squirt.