Trumpman critique, part 3
Here are my comments on the third part of Trumpman's paper, "Cloud Analysis".
Early in this section Trumpman states that "Explosions are occurring before any observable signs of collapse". This is in direct contradiction to the sequence of events given at the beginning of the previous section, in which he states that the tower antenna moves before any explosions are seen. Having viewed videos of the WTC1 collapse I have not seen the explosions prior to the collapse that Trumpman asserts are visible; however, as the building was on fire and emitting large volumes of smoke at the time, this could have been confused with explosions. The emissions of material from below the collapse zone, believed by many to be window breakage due to overpressure and the resulting ejection of debris, are referred to as explosions.
Trumpman asserts that the clouds of dust emitted early in the collapse are concrete dust, based solely on their colour, but does not discuss how their appearance differs from plaster or drywall dust. He states that the presence of explosives is demonstrated by the emission of concrete dust before floor 98 impacts floor 97, but if the dust expelled at this time is from plaster and drywall this conclusion is invalid. In any case it is not clear to me from viewing videos that this happens at all, and Trumpman includes no still pictures to illustrate his assertions.
Trumpman analyses the volumes of the dust clouds after expulsion from the towers, working from the assumption that mixing of air between the emitted dust clouds and the air initially outside the towers is limited to 1/3 of the final volume. His justification for this is that "It has been asserted that one takes about 1/3 off to account for expansion by air turbulence", but there is no source given for this assertion nor any discussion of how it was arrived at.
Trumpman next calculates the fall velocities at each floor impact, and attempts to estimate the energy absorption at each impact by determining the difference between the expected kinetic energy had the upper section fallen in free fall and the actual kinetic energy from his velocity estimates. There are three crucial errors in his analysis here. Firstly, due to his incorrect value for the weight of the tower, all his kinetic energies are only 40% of the correct values. Secondly, he calculates the impact velocity at each floor as being inversely proportional to the fall time, whereas for the case of constant acceleration it should be proportional to the square root of the fall time. Most seriously, however, his energy terms are incorrect. For a proper analysis it would be necessary to determine the velocity just after impact rather than just before impact, and to subtract the post-impact kinetic energy from the pre-impact kinetic energy. This is not equivalent to Trumpman's calculation; in particular it leads to an incorrect estimate of zero energy loss at the first impact, as the first floor collapse would be expected to proceed at free fall. Interestingly, though, this method gives a reasonable estimate, for each stage of the collapse, of the energy lost in the previous stage; obviously for the first stage this is zero.
Trumpman next calculates the energy required to collapse a single floor. I do not have the expertise to comment on his methodology, but qualitatively his result that the energy is a very small fraction of the kinetic energy available appears reasonable by comparison with the work of other authors. Indeed, Trumpman makes the point that the column collapse energy was relatively small: "I observed in my research that people mistakenly believe columns would have resisted the collapse significantly. It is true, they can support large loads. But they cannot handle that same weight dropped from a height." He then calculates, based on his incorrect figures for energy loss, the amount of energy available for pulverisation of concrete, and determines that this would be able to pulverise none of the concrete from the 97th floor, 28% of that from the 96th, 55% from the 95th and 20% from the 94th. He makes no estimate of the effect of random errors in time measurement on these numbers. Given that his energies are only 40% of what they should be and his assumptions are incorrect, it is possible to re-calculate these numbers to give the result that sufficient energy was available to pulverise 70% of the 97th, 137% of the 96th and 50% of the 95th floor, an average of 85% of the concrete in these three floors.
Trumpman now goes on to state that, since there was insufficient energy lost in each collapse stage to pulverise the concrete in that stage totally, there could therefore have been no energy left over for expansion of the dust cloud. This is based on the completely unjustified and unrealistic assumption that all the concrete in every floor was pulverised to fine dust. The existence of large slabs of compacted concrete from multiple floors in the WTC rubble shows that this assumption is incorrect. He then calculates that the dust cloud expands by 2.5 times as the building collapses, comparing this with Hoffman's figure of 3.4 times, and states that there is no possible source for this expansion. His analysis in this section becomes extremely confusing and disjointed, punctuated with an irrelevant rant about the cost of the NIST enquiry, so it is hard to determine what his point is. If, however, he is arguing, as does Hoffman, that the dust cloud expansion was due to thermal expansion of the air, there is a serious logical flaw in this argument. He estimates the average temperature in a floor of WTC1 as 148C, or 421 kelvin. For a 2.5 times expansion this would have to be heated to 1053 kelvin, or 779C, a temperature sufficiently high to cause serious (probably fatal) burns to anyone exposed to this dust cloud as it fell to ground level. This same issue has caused Hoffman to revise his theory of dust cloud expansion to include the postulate of 2,000 tons of water whose origin is not known. Indeed, Hoffman's latest version of his dust cloud analysis has been under development since January 2004, suggesting that this discrepancy is proving extremely difficult to resolve.
Later in the paper, it should be pointed out, Trumpman suggests that the additional air volume was created by the gases released in the explosion of 1.4 tonnes of HMX high explosive. This is a more reasonable suggestion than that of thermal expansion of the dust cloud. Even so, it rests on the fundamental assumption that mixing with external air is limited to 1/3 of the final volume of the cloud, and this is not satisfactorily established in this paper.
Dave