TheRedWorm
I AM the Red Worm!
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2007
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I see an intact upper block crushing through some disabled floors. How is this a correct analogy?
How crushed were the upper portions of the WTC towers, and how do you conclude this?
I see an intact upper block crushing through some disabled floors. How is this a correct analogy?
Because the rubble is a loose and randomized collection of building fragments and tends to spill over the sides. Individual rubble pieces do not have sufficient mass to crush through intact building components.
What we're discussing is impact force. Let us say that the top block falling down has a mass of 1000 kg (just for ease of calculating it). We'll use this nifty online calculator. Again, for ease of calculating, let's imagine the height being 10 meters. Total impact force with these parameters is 1,400,000 N.
Now, let's say the top block is split up into 1000 1 kg pieces. Other parameters remain the same. The pieces fall on the bottom block, each impacting with 1400 N. This happens a thousand times, giving us 1000*1400 = 1,400,000 N, the same force as if we dropped a solid block.
Now, explain how this energy is deflected.
Ok, sorry, it's me who missed it.
1. The layer between the falling section and the lower section is rubble.I see an intact upper block crushing through some disabled floors. How is this a correct analogy?
Ok, sorry, it's me who missed it.
1. The layer between the falling section and the lower section is rubble.
Being driven by an intact upper block. I asked how rubble alone could crush the lower part of the building.
How crushed were the upper portions of the WTC towers, and how do you conclude this?
No, what we have here is a pile-on.
In all these posts not a single one of you has shown how rubble can crush through a building through gravity alone. Your ridiculous notion does not stand up to scrutiny. In your parlance, that's a "Fail".
"If you push something hard enough it will fall over."
- Fudd's First Law of Opposition
Interesting. So, are you saying that the upper section of each building remains intact until it reaches the floor?Being driven by an intact upper block.
To which I responded with:How crushed were the upper portions of the WTC towers, and how do you conclude this?
1,000kg produces 140,000 N.
1 kg gives 140 N.
The 1,000 pieces hit the intact components differently. Force is applied differentially. As smaller discrete units, air friction and friction from other flying parts affects them differentially.
The energy is deflected because a 1 kg object will not destroy the various building components. Damage perhaps, but not destruction. If the building part that the 1kg mass hits is not destroyed, the 1 kg object is deflected.
It's like if I drop a bowling ball on your head from a window above, I would probably kill you. Your skull would be crushed. If I drop the broken fragments of a bowling ball on your head from a window above, it would hurt you, you would sustain bruises, but your skull would not be crushed.
Seriously, this is high school physics. Did you attend high school?
Not when you factor in drop height. You should look at the link I provided.
Uhm... no.
Uhm... no. You see, we are discussing total impact force and the sustainability of an object to said force. The total force is the same whether the objects falling are many or a single one with the same mass. You are simply wrong here, and I have demonstrated such.
If you could arrange it so that all the pieces of the ball struck me, the impact force on my head would be the same. Seriously, this is high school physics.
Pretty sure I did. But, as you say, it doesn't matter for our purposes.
In logical argument, you can't just say "um, no" without explaining yourself. Well, you can, but no one will take you very seriously.
You're just repeating your same false assertion. The total force is not the same when you have particles instead of a single solid mass.
"The linear momentum of a system of particles is the vector sum of the momenta of all the individual objects in the system"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momentum
Did you?
MM
Pretty sure I did. But, as you say, it doesn't matter for our purposes.
In logical argument, you can't just say "um, no" without explaining yourself. Well, you can, but no one will take you very seriously.
You're just repeating your same false assertion. The total force is not the same when you have particles instead of a single solid mass.
It would be close, but not the same. But it doesn't matter, does it? This isn't what happened in the WTC.
Where have I seen that argument before? Ah yes!
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=5266918#post5266918
Dropping a bag of sand onto a structure has the potential focus more destructive force
than dumping the contents of the same bag onto the structure.
You have to talk to OCTers at a kindergarten level ergo or theydon't get it.
MM