Belz...
Fiend God
What lateral forces?
You DO know what lateral forces are, right ?
What lateral forces?
I'm sure SOMEONE here can calculate how wide a 3" object would appear from that distance, and I'm pretty sure it'd be too small for it to even register on the picture.
I'm sure SOMEONE here can calculate how wide a 3" object would appear from that distance, and I'm pretty sure it'd be too small for it to even register on the picture.
I'm sure SOMEONE here can calculate how wide a 3" object would appear from that distance, and I'm pretty sure it'd be too small for it to even register on the picture.
The building to the left of the spire, with the domed top, is 2 World Financial Center. It's 196.5 meters tall (just about 644.5 feet). Measuring the picture width in WFC2 height units gives a horizontal field of view very close to what you calculated. That means that one pixel is close to two feet wide at the "spire" (I get just about 23 inches).
Maxim:
If a suppossed explantion does not explain the event, it is not the truth. No explanation that does not explain the event can be the truth.
So far no explanation in existence explains free fall and total pulverization of the towers appears to exist. Has anyone seen one?
gravity
I got very similar numbers. In fact, since the width of the picture in pixels is known and there's an object of known size at very nearly the same distance as the "spire", it isn't even necessary to know the distance to the camera. It comes down to a simple exercise in proportions. I doubt that the error involved in doing it that way will be significantly worse than the error involved in trying to estimate distances from online maps.
The building to the left of the spire, with the domed top, is 2 World Financial Center. It's 196.5 meters tall (just about 644.5 feet). Measuring the picture width in WFC2 height units gives a horizontal field of view very close to what you calculated. That means that one pixel is close to two feet wide at the "spire" (I get just about 23 inches).
I think I see. If you measure the width of the picture in proportion to an object of known size, like the height of 2WFC, you can figure what the linear field of view was at the plane in which your reference object lies. If you know the distance between the camera and that plane, you can figure the angular field of view with simple trig. If you then measure the width of some other object in proportion to the width of the picture, you can figure what angle it subtended at the camera. If you know that and the distance from the camera to the object, you can figure out its size with a bit more simple trig.
Is that more or less correct?
A two foot column at 7500 feet.
One second later from the same camera, vertical, flexible structure, fine elements a little lower is seen. (What happens when you look down a line of 100 ,slightly obliquely at 7500 feet, and they are 3 inches in diameter, then a row takes off at 90 degrees across the line of sight?)
(What happens when you look down a line of 100 ,slightly obliquely at 7500 feet, and they are 3 inches in diameter, then a row takes off at 90 degrees across the line of sight?)
4. Unfortunately I am unable to obtain a view of the building core but to put your picture in perspective I have attached a more accurate view of the structure and superimposed as you have. Tells quite a different story doesn't it (the drawing is an extract from the PA drawing).
Actually, I prefer something more like this:Well, just to be really accurate and give a view that isn't misleading about the amount of damage, try this picture:
No, you shill! Where are the stars?!
Actually, I prefer something more like this:
http://www.suvi.org/NYattack/wtc_attack/hole_in_tower1.jpg