It's fair to analyse your post the way CT'ers posts get analysed.
I completely agree. There is a difference, however. I was asking for clarification about what the discussion is. All I see is an argument from incredulty that an enormous amount of energy is required to produce collapse. I've never actually seen a calculation that determines how much energy is required to collapse a skyscraper. Have you?
Incidentally, I quite frequently make clear that I have only very basic knowledge of structural engineering and what have you. And I mean very basic. You'll notice I do not contribute significantly to such debates, because I do not feel I have the knowledge to do so. I will ask questions of those that know mroe than me, however, because I want to learn.
I will also call foul when people start throwing about photographs as "evidence" (because that's something I DO know about).
Except for the components that are forced outwards and don't make contact with the standing components that remain. This is what einsteen is trying to discuss.
Certainly. I was speaking in generalisations. Would it be true then that the key questions is "What percentage of the debris was forced outwards and did not contribute to subsequent collapse?"?
If a CT'er expressed such an opinion here they would be quietly put in their place. "I really don't see..." is just waffle. Have you done the calculations? Please present them.
As I've said many times, I lack the expertise for such a calculation. Have you done them? How much energy is required to collapse the WTC?
I certainly don't expect my ignorant musings to be held up as any sort of credible argument. Quite the contrary, if I am incorrect, and large amounts of energy ARE required, I would dearly hope my fellow JREFers will put me to rights about that fact.
You are right though, perhaps I should have asked a question, to make it more clear I wasn't trying to produce a solid argument.
So to everyone here, for the benefit of laymen...
1) Am I correct in asserting that failure of structural integrity will result in a structure collapse?
And if yes to above:
2) What magnitude of energy is required to undermine structural integrity of a building like the WTC towers?
So you're likening a 400m steel-framed building, with considerable cross-bracing, to a horizontal line of dominoes each of which is unconnected to its neighbour? Lines of falling dominoes don't accelerate. The analogy is flawed in so many ways it's nearly pointless discussing it.
I think you're exaggerating the significance of the anology. It was an expression of structural integrity, nothing more.
A CT'er would point out that the Windsor building in Madrid suffered some collapse in the upper levels but maintained its integrity.
True. Structural componants certainly do not interact as equally as a collection of dominoes. Some componants are of more importance than others - I would not, for example, to expect a collapsed drywall to bring down the entire WTC.
I merely wanted to point out that a building is a STRUCTURE - not a single entity. It is comprised of many componants that interact. The force required to disrupt integrity of given componants can be very small, but those disrupted componants then disrupt surrounding componants and so on, like a domino. How significant such a disruption will be depends on a number of things.
One of those things is building structure redundancy.
Anecdote time. I'm not sure if you're familiar with the
Burj Dubai? It is slated to become the tallest building in the world.
The unofficials story of its origins is a little interesting. As you may or may not know, Dubai has poured billions into enormous developments and to do this they have assembled an enormous international team of experts.
Two of those experts were my cousin (a computer graphic artist) and his wife (a civil engineer).
While playing around with various ideas, my cousin and his team produced a computer graphic of a helix shaped skyscraper. Various officials (supposedly including Sheik Al Maktoum himself) rather liked the look of it and decided they wanted it built.
An Australian guy who built the physical models of all the buildings made a model by have a central pillar in a particular shape as a "key" and simply slightly rotating the orientation of the keyhole on each floor, thus creating a helix.
Great for a model. Impossible for actual engineering.
With things heating up in Iraq etc. my cousin and his wife decided to leave (she's now designing a new runway for Heathrow Airport or something...). They left the team doing wind tunnel tests on this skyscraper model. why? They were unsure if the building was even capable of standing up.
Now what was the point of this rambling narrative?
Skyscrapers are not as robust as some here seem to think. Sometimes just getting them to stand up takes some incredible skill. Basic language comprehension is all you need to know that the less stable something is, the easier it is to make it lose that stability.
-Andrew