You simply won't admit that it is simultaneously being decelerated by the same amount by a lower structure causing equilibrium.
For a one floor drop:
13 stories for the North tower falling on the floor below
d=distance, g=acceleration of gravity, t=time, v=velocity
d = 0.5 g x t²
Solve for time when g=9.81 m/s2, d= 3.8 meters:
3.8=0.5(9.81)*t
23.8=4.905*t
23.8/4.905=t
20.775=t
2(SQRT)0.775=t
0.88 Seconds = t
Solve for v:
V
F=V
I+gt
Since initial velocity is 0:
V
F=gt
G=9.81 m/s
2 t=0.88 seconds
V
F=9.81*0.88
VF= 8.63 m/s
Now assume a floor has the capacity to stop the mass
completely. (DeltaV=-8.63 m/s). Depth of the floor is assumed to be 18 inches or ~.46 meters. Find time:
d = 1/2 (Vi+Vf) x t
D= .46 meters Vi=8.63 m/s Vf=0 m/s t=?
.46=1/2(8.63+0)*t
.46= 4.315t
t= .46/4.135
t= 0.11 seconds
Acceleration:
A=deltaV/DeltaT
Since we count the direction of gravity as positive and the force required to stop the mass is in the negative direction dV=-8.63 m/s
dT=.11 seconds
A=-8.63/.11
A= -78.45 m/s2
or
~7.99 g's
But the floor doesn't have nearly the capacity to bring the mass to a
stop. Meaning it fails before an 8g amplification is met. Let's find something closer:
p = momentum = m x v
m1 = mass of the top 15 stories
m2 = mass of the top 16 stories = aprox. (16/15) x m1
v1 = velocity before the additional mass is added = 8.63 m/s
v2 = velocity after the mass is added (unknown)
Momentum is conserved, so:
p = m1 x v1 = m2 x v2 = (31/30) x m1 x v2
Solving for v2:
V
2=V
1*(15/16)
V
2=8.63*(15/16)
V2~ 8.09 m/s
We want to find DeltaT for an accurate calculation of the instantaneous acceleration caused by impact with the floor so:
d = 1/2 (Vi+Vf) x t
d=.46 meters Vi=8.63 m/s Vf=8.09m/s t=?
0.46=1/2(8.63-8.09)t
0.46=1/2(0.54)t
0.46=0.27t
t= 0.46/0.27
t= 1.7 seconds
A=dV/dT
dV=0.54 m/s dT=1.7 seconds
A=0.54/1.7
A= 0.31 m/s2
Since the direction of gravity is considered positive, the upwards direction will be considered negative here so the value for acceleration relative to the direction of gravity in this final value should read:
A=-0.31 m/s2
This means that the floor could never have offered enough resistance to the mass above to make it stop, even from a drop of one floor height. The net acceleration of the upper mass is still
positive relative to the direction of gravity (9.81-0.31= 9.49 m/s2), so the mass is still descending.
It means while the
maximum load amplification would be almost 8 times the static weight of the mass, significantly less was required for the floors to fail. The 8g figure is unattainable because the floor failed before it could get anywhere near that. Notice that the change in velocity to get 8g's was 8.63 m/s vs this
later figure of a 0.54 m/s change (meaning it's still moving at
8.09 m/s after losing a little speed with the first floor impact).
The difference in these values is significant wrt the load amplification as well since acceleration is both time dependent and velocity dependent.
This calculation requires
zero explosives or external factors to facilitate BTW.
If I made any errors people can feel free to pick them out.
The point to demonstrate is that even after the floor impacts, not only is the mass of the next floor added, but the mass is still traveling with a net positive acceleration in the same direction as gravity.
EDIT: Wow... looks like chandlers' error is worse than I initially realized. He has a problem with
conservation of momentum which easily explains the net values derived in his graphics. A physics teacher that doesn't understand conservation of momentum, bloody wonderful...