2 cents:
I have to start with: Damn it! I hate math proofs and explanations almost as much as I dislike cheats, fraudsters, and snakeoil-butt salesmen.
It is logarithmic. No bias here, other than against math, perhaps. Avoided math for law school, but for unknown reasons still hit algebra, geometry, and pre-cal-trig, BOO!
If SHU were an exponential in curve we would see pepper heat (SHU) abruptly spiking into infinity across a broad range of genetics, but we see inconsistent bumps in the millions. Sure all the untested peppers out there could prove this wrong, but there is a dispute of true genetic diversity at the upper echelons of the SHU curve, right? ("new scorpion", "new primo", "new pirranah" ((not my table)) new pepper "World War Z" new pepper "what ever tha faq"). That is to say, there is likely a disproportionately small amount of genetic diversity at the height of the curve and therefore, limited peppers bringing heat at the upper ranges of the SHU chart.
Consider this the SHU heat has largely been "curved" around the 10-500,000 range, for example, generic bell, Anaheim, New Mexico --> Jalapeno, Serano --> Hananero, Red Savina, but most superhot heat and genetics are limited/ close relatives/not highly hybridized or stabilized (until proven otherwise) it is likely fair to say the SHU is logarithmic, not linear, because we would see the current pepper diaspora exhibit a more "line like" heat curve, which we do not.
Because we see a large amount of peppers making up the lower part of the curve, as discussed above, and a relative fewer amount of peppers [read: 7-pot, ghost, reaper] (until proven to be genetically diverse) the SHU curve is likely properly to be understood as logarithmic.
Last thought, linear curves involve multiple constants. (I.e. rise/run). Nature is not often one to produce cohesive corralative constants.
Love to be proven wrong that genetics are highly variable and SHU is somehow linear, but hard to imagine in a scientific world, few things are linear.
Wow, I guess I need to tell some teachers and professors they may not have failed me....
Happy to discuss this 2 pence ( for the INTL crowd )
(Edit: To answer your other question, yea despite dude's comments it's not clear or entirely fair to say based on a logarithmic curve one "choche" pepper is "X times hotter than, blah blah blah" that gets to my snakeoil-butt salesman comment. When you are in the stratosphere relative is just that. Relative. What I will say is mutch like the stratosphere and beyond, with hot peppers there is still a lot we don't know. Companion alkaloids, flavinoids, terpenes, it's a new frontier. Let's dictate the next generation -Queue theme song)
Indy
I have to start with: Damn it! I hate math proofs and explanations almost as much as I dislike cheats, fraudsters, and snakeoil-butt salesmen.
It is logarithmic. No bias here, other than against math, perhaps. Avoided math for law school, but for unknown reasons still hit algebra, geometry, and pre-cal-trig, BOO!
If SHU were an exponential in curve we would see pepper heat (SHU) abruptly spiking into infinity across a broad range of genetics, but we see inconsistent bumps in the millions. Sure all the untested peppers out there could prove this wrong, but there is a dispute of true genetic diversity at the upper echelons of the SHU curve, right? ("new scorpion", "new primo", "new pirranah" ((not my table)) new pepper "World War Z" new pepper "what ever tha faq"). That is to say, there is likely a disproportionately small amount of genetic diversity at the height of the curve and therefore, limited peppers bringing heat at the upper ranges of the SHU chart.
Consider this the SHU heat has largely been "curved" around the 10-500,000 range, for example, generic bell, Anaheim, New Mexico --> Jalapeno, Serano --> Hananero, Red Savina, but most superhot heat and genetics are limited/ close relatives/not highly hybridized or stabilized (until proven otherwise) it is likely fair to say the SHU is logarithmic, not linear, because we would see the current pepper diaspora exhibit a more "line like" heat curve, which we do not.
Because we see a large amount of peppers making up the lower part of the curve, as discussed above, and a relative fewer amount of peppers [read: 7-pot, ghost, reaper] (until proven to be genetically diverse) the SHU curve is likely properly to be understood as logarithmic.
Last thought, linear curves involve multiple constants. (I.e. rise/run). Nature is not often one to produce cohesive corralative constants.
Love to be proven wrong that genetics are highly variable and SHU is somehow linear, but hard to imagine in a scientific world, few things are linear.
Wow, I guess I need to tell some teachers and professors they may not have failed me....
Happy to discuss this 2 pence ( for the INTL crowd )
(Edit: To answer your other question, yea despite dude's comments it's not clear or entirely fair to say based on a logarithmic curve one "choche" pepper is "X times hotter than, blah blah blah" that gets to my snakeoil-butt salesman comment. When you are in the stratosphere relative is just that. Relative. What I will say is mutch like the stratosphere and beyond, with hot peppers there is still a lot we don't know. Companion alkaloids, flavinoids, terpenes, it's a new frontier. Let's dictate the next generation -Queue theme song)
Indy
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