Yes - a new equilibrium develops - force of upper block on lower block is balanced by a reaction force of lower block on upper block as Newton suggested.
These forces will evidently affect both blocks - the upper one may bounce while the lower acts as a spring or both may get locally damaged in the contact area, for example. There are many possibilities.
And it demonstrates the error of Prof. Bazant & Co. They ignore the reaction force acting on the upper part C (or upper block) at contact. They do it because they assume that the upper part C is rigid and not affected by the reaction force so that part C remains intact, while the action force sheds the lower structure.
Upper part C is not really a solid block - it is mostly air with strong columns and thin floors. Very fragile if you drop it. And I am sure that two outer walls of the upper part C will miss the lower part A, if you drop.
The lower part A is also not a solid block but its vertical columns are really dangerous if you drop something on them, e.g. the lowest floor of part C.
The columns of part A will slice through the lowest floor of part C, for example.
But not according to Bazant. The lowest floor of part C - say floor 97 of WTC 1 - is rigid (!!!) and sheds the columns below into rubble.
Nonsense, of course.
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