phunk
Illuminator
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2007
- Messages
- 4,127
The force generated by a part C impacting a part A is dynamic. Before and after impact it is zero.
Wouldn't it be 'mg' after, not 0?
The force generated by a part C impacting a part A is dynamic. Before and after impact it is zero.
Golly-Gosh and Cripes Heiwa... Is that the time already ?
One thing you have to know about T is that you can never win. No way. YOU don't WIN- he LOSES. So I always say ' let him lose and good luck '. It's better to be the bigger man sometimes.
.Okay I have a question (keep in mind that I am an electrical engineer, not a mechanical engineer so bear with me here......)
If the crushed and compacted mass generates a higher average and peak force on the solid surface...
Is this because less energy goes into deforming the crushed and compacted mass as would go into deforming the "pre-broken" mass?
You can answer me by PM if you don't want to in the thread....
.
First questions:
Do you, or do you not agree that, if dropped onto a solid surface, the peak force of a crushed and compacted mass of 3 stories of WTC would generate a higher AVERAGE force on the solid surface than the same pre-crushed structure?
Do you, or do you not agree that, if dropped onto a solid surface, the peak force of a crushed and compacted mass of 3 stories of WTC would generate a higher PEAK force on the solid surface than the same pre-crushed structure?
The force generated by a part C impacting a part A is dynamic. Before and after impact it is zero.
Wouldn't it be 'mg' after, not 0?
Newt,
No problem. Talking about it here is why I brought it up.
My point is that I'm not talking (yet) about the PROCESS by which it got crushed, or the energy that this process will take.
For now, I am talking about the fact that, if you take a structure such as floors of an office building, the debris formed when it has been crushed & compacted has a higher density than the material before it was crushed & compacted.
Or imagine dropping a bookcase full of books (3 shelves, 2' apart) from a height of 32'. (Easy math.) Assume that shell (i.e., top, bottom & sides) of the bookcase happens to weigh the same as each shelf with its books. When it hits the ground, it's doing 32 ft/sec. Imagine three cases:
1. When the book case hits the floor, imagine that the support brackets on each shelf instantly give way.
2. The bookcase is packaged as delivered by IKEA with all the books stacked & wrapped with packing tape on top. A nice tight bundle.
3.The strength of all the components of the bookcase are sufficient that it survives the drop perfectly intact. The shelves & frame flex like crazy, but nothing breaks. Amazing bookcase.
Case 1. The initial impact delivers the momentum of the shell of the bookshelf ONLY. The shelves all break free, and continue towards the floor. The second impact (bottom shelf) happens about (3 ft / 32 ft/sec =) 0.1 second later, the next 0.05 seconds after that, & the last 0.05 seconds after that. (I've assumed the books are 1' high.) In this case, then you have 4 separate impacts, each delivering 1/4th the total momentum of the entire bookcase.
Case 2. This is the equivalent of a "100% crushed & compacted" bookcase. There is no flex, no give, & no opportunity for anything to break, except in the collision itself. This collision delivers the entire momentum to the ground in one instant.
Case 3. This is intermediate between the first two cases. All of the flexing stretches out the impact in time.
In each case, the total momentum that the bookshelf delivers to the ground is identical. (The mass of the bookshelf x it's terminal velocity.) There is a theorem that equates the "impulse" (force integrated over time) to the change in momentum of the bookcase. And Newtons "equal & opposite forces" law says that the force the ground exerts on the bookcase is equal to the force the bookcase delivers to the ground.
On a force (y axis) vs. time (x axis) graph, the impulse is the area under the curve. So, keeping the areas under the curves the same for all three cases, stretching out the duration of the impact in time automatically lowers the peak and average forces.
Parts breaking & subcomponents colliding separately (like the shelves when the supports break), stretches out the collision time a lot. Structures flexing stretches out the time duration to a lesser amount. But both reduce both the max force & average force delivered to the ground.
"Tah dah...!"
Oh, excuse me, academics in the house. "QED".
Later, we'll get into the subtler aspects, like strength of the structural connections prior to crushing, and the strength of the interdigitation after crushing.
Tom
phunk,
No, he's got it right.
Other than the earth (which does it with gravity), in order for two parts to exert forces on each other, they have to touch each other. Either directly, or thru an intermediate structure called a "load path".
Before the collision & after the collision, parts aren't touching each other, so they exert no force on each other.
One important point is that parts can exert forces on each other in collisions that are MUCH greater than their weight. The weight of something is called it's "static load". When one thing hits another in a collision, the force that one exerts on the other is called a "dynamic load". This load can be MUCH greater than the static load.
Carefully set a brick on a glass table: No problem. Drop the brick on the glass table: big problem. The dynamic load can be much (10x, 20x, 100x) bigger than the static one, depending on the speed and "rigidity" of the impact.
Tom
It seems tfk is trying to explain what happens to a tennis ball when hit by a racket or a golf ball when hit by a driver. Yes, the forces involved may be several times the weights of the balls.
It seems?? So you're not certain??
What has more impact? A brick resting on your head? Or a brick dropped on your head? Which is dynamic?
Anders,
.
First questions:
Do you, or do you not agree that, if dropped onto a solid surface, the peak force of a crushed and compacted mass of 3 stories of WTC would generate a higher AVERAGE force on the solid surface than the same pre-crushed structure?
Do you, or do you not agree that, if dropped onto a solid surface, the peak force of a crushed and compacted mass of 3 stories of WTC would generate a higher PEAK force on the solid surface than the same pre-crushed structure?
I have no idea what tfk is trying to prove. Re question a brick resting on a head provides no impact at all. It is resting = no impact. If you drop it and it contacts something, e.g. head, suggest wearing a helmet that easily absorbs the impact and deflects the brick unless brick just bounces on helmet.
Pay no attention to him. He is just fishing for an angle. I like the brick thing though. I am thinking of two composite glass bricks built around steel fremes. One brick is 90 inches tall and the one to be dropped on it is 10 inches tall and is of simillar but somewhat lighter construction.
Im also imagining what would happen if the 10 inch brick was crushed, broken and disintegrating before it contacted the lower brick.
I like the brick thing too. It describes your thought process very well.
Care to answer the questions?
They aren't hard.
Tom
Pay no attention to him. He is just fishing for an angle. I like the brick thing though. I am thinking of two composite glass bricks built around steel fremes. One brick is 90 inches tall and the one to be dropped on it is 10 inches tall and is of simillar but somewhat lighter construction.
.I have no idea what tfk is trying to prove.
We're talking about a composite glass and steel structure that is composed of 14 levels being dropped on another composite glass and steel structure composed of 97 levels (or 96 or whatever).
Say each level has a mass of 100 units.
Now, each level in turn has to be dealt with as a single level on the bottom, because the bottom is not moving and has no momentum. However, the levels on the top have to be treated as a total mass, as the entire top is falling and, most likely, breaking apart into component pieces.
So the initial impact on the bottom section, which occurs to floor 97, is 1400 units impacting a level which has only about 100 units of mass. 1400 units of glass and steel come plowing into a glass and steel structure of only 100 units - destruction ensues.
phunk,
No, he's got it right.
Other than the earth (which does it with gravity), in order for two parts to exert forces on each other, they have to touch each other. Either directly, or thru an intermediate structure called a "load path".