Think about your model. The rocket engines are accelerating the "ground." That means the only parts that accelerate with the rocket engine are those for which there is a stable load path going back to the ground. Everything else is not accelerating, and being hit by this structure.
But that (the bolded part) is not accurate because the top is accelerating as is the rubble, otherwise in the gravity version the top and the rubble would have fallen in freefall, or what am I missing?
In the freefall case it's obvious that the top wouldn't be crushed until reaching the ground.
The rubble does not have a stable load path to ground. They are free objects. They are not reliably carried by the lower structure's columns, but are instead impacting all over the place -- columns, floors, eccentrically, and so on. Thus, the rubble counts as part of the detached mass, which includes the upper block.
My problem keeps being that both the rubble and the top are also pushed by the bottom, experimenting an acceleration (if the top fell at 2/3 g in the gravity version, the acceleration of the top and rubble in the rocket version would be 1/3 g).
Yes, there is. Think of it like this -- F = m a, right? The forces on the upper block, once there is a significant rubble layer, are inertial forces. If you measure the aggregate deceleration of the upper block, you know the stress in that block.
As the upper block + rubble layer increases, m increases. F, on the other hand, is decreasing in your reframe of the problem -- the rockets have to throttle down. As a result, a decreases. That means the stress in the surviving upper block decreases as the collapse continues.
Hum... That makes sense. But that doesn't prevent the possibility of a few more floors destroyed, does it?
In my view, ignoring the ejection of mass from the system and the non-homogeneous nature of the rubble layer, the total thrust of the rockets will be a simple function of the intact bottom mass which must accelerate at g, and the rest of the mass which must accelerate at 1/3 g. That's my way of understanding that the thrust must decrease in order to maintain the acceleration: as the mass of the bottom decreases and the mass of the rest increases, the required force will be less because the increasing mass requires less acceleration. That result is surprising and counterintuitive for me, but that's life
The peak stress in the upper block is the failure stress of the floor at the collision interface. It simply cannot transmit any higher stress than that. So we expect to see some damage to the upper block at the initial contact, followed by very little damage to the upper block afterward, until it again hits the "immovable" rocket platform at which point it will fail floor-by-floor in the crush up phase.
I see why there's
less damage but I don't see why there's
very little damage to the upper block afterward.
I still would understand it if it were the parameters from the WTC and maybe other buildings that make the crush-up not to happen but not in general, but you said that's not the case. Wonder what I'm missing.
I've read the explanation to Gourley from Bazant. I didn't understand most of it, but I see that he uses conservation of momentum and energy and that he introduces factors such as mass shedding ratio and mass compaction ratio, which makes me wonder if the rubble layer acts like a cushion as it is compacted, that dampens the dynamic load on the top, making it able to support itself when it's an "almost static" load with the additional advantage of reduced acceleration.
It also seems relevant to me that he employs real world data to feed the equations instead of solving them in general, which would settle the universality of the phenomenon.
In the real WTC situation, we don't have a true "crush down / crush up" anyway. What actually happens is the core and perimeter structure of the lower block funnels falling material onto the floors. The truss floors preferentially fail downward, whereas the beam-framed floors in the core preferentially fail upward. I wrote a cartoon describing this in the supporting presentation for my debate with Tony Szamboti, which you can read here:
http://www.911myths.com/index.php/Ryanmackey (pages 20-25 of the presentation, downloadable as PPT or PDF).
Thank you very much. Not fully understood but let's leave that for another occasion
