example #1...
African woman holds water vase atop her head.
example #2...
Take said vase, lift it 8-12 feet up from her head, then drop it.
DO I have to say more...
TAM
Herein lies the single problem I have with the WTC collapse, and the only gap in my understanding.
I understand the above, which is an illustration of the difference between a dynamic load and a static load.
Let's modify your scenario a little, and make it a heavy solid bronze statue, sitting on a desk.
Just sitting there, obviously the force of gravity pushing the statue down matches the net force of the table resisting it.
Obviously if you lift the statue up and drop it, it will hit the table with more force than it has just sitting there. Much more. But it might crash into the desk and then stop, or it might hit the desk with enough force that the desk collapses.
My issue is, we know roughly how big the statue is and we know how high it fell from, and we know it made the desk collapse. Why can't we calculate the force involved in the impact collision?
We know NIST didn't present it, and we know CTers latch onto this like limpets onto a rock.
My question is, can
we present it, even in simplified form? Wouldn't this be useful?
In the early days I was told NIST didn't present this calculation because it was very simple physics that the intact floors couldn't resist such an impact. I can accept that. But if it's simple, presenting a (simplified) calculation should be simple.
Alternatively, if it's actually highly complex (as some are now proposing here), shouldn't that be something NIST should have considered calculating? I would have thought it would be a useful thing to consider in building design and safety.
Or alternatively, is it a given in structural design that a total failure of 1 or 2 or 3 floors would always result in a global collapse?
Or finally another option, in the reality the initial impact event itself is so complex that NIST couldn't calculate it? (Even in simplistic form?).
Just to be clear, I am quite capable of accepting any of the above explanations, it's just right now this single part of the entire thing hasn't been explained to me. Hopefully someone can fill in the gap?
-Gumboot