TubbaBlubba
Knave of the Dudes
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2010
- Messages
- 12,942
Yes.
See? That doesn't help.
I'm just a theoretical physics student, not a structural engineer, but I think he has a point. In a decreased stiffness scenario, two things would change:
1. It would spread out the area of impact a bit. Steel is sensitive to shattering when subject to shock, but that's not going to happen here, so this is unlikely to be an important factor - the force will distribute throughout the steel anyway.
2. It would "flatten" the impulse a bit. With a perfectly stiff girder the impulse would be described by a delta function, with a girder made out of mercury, you'd have an integral running until every particle has made contact with the impact surface. Again, structural steel is going to be tough enough that I struggle to see this difference mattering, if you apply the impulse over 0.1 or 0.01 seconds. It's going to do a nice bit of plastic deformation during the peak load anyway, the structural integrity will be compromised and things will risk collapsing.
In any realistic scenario, the magnitude of the applied force will be the primary factor, not slight differences in impact time or area of application.
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