The angle is determined by tracing numerous features, such as the NW corner, elements of the antenna, and points on the upper section on the south side. Cross-referencing between several pieces of footage has also been necessary.The answer is that it did not tilt at all before collectively falling downward. Because any such tilt requires the center of gravity to move downward, and what other possible meaning could "collectively falling downward" have besides downward movement of the center of gravity?
Vertical movement of the NW corner *lags* vertical movement of other features (at very low level, it's not a definitive lag, but a much much lower rate of movement. Noise in the data cannot be removed entirely). The angle is determined by determining the point at which vertical movement of the NW corner *begins*, and referencing with other features.
You're not far off there. Yes, there appears to be *very* slight upward motion of the NW corner at initiation. I'll put a graph together to highlight.That is, unless someone is claiming that the top section first tilted like a seesaw. One side tilting down, and the other side moving upward, around a fulcrum in the middle, so that the center of gravity did not drop.
It's *very* slight upward motion, but the NW corner *lag* is much easier to identify. From the data I have, core failure preceeds south face failure.there was no structural portion of the towers that could be a strong enough or rigid enough lever arm for seesaw tilting, even if the core were capable of serving as a fulcrum.
How could NIST state south face failure led to subsequent failures if such did not preceed the subsequent failures ?
NIST state 8 degree rotation before vertical drop of the upper block.Did NIST use the exact same time reference for their supposed 8% figure?
You are saying ZERO degrees before vertical drop.
I am saying ~1 degree before vertical drop.
Who is right ? NIST certainly are not.
Rotation did not stop entirely at that point of course, and it looks like the upper section rapidly deformed and broke apart shortly after initiation.