What the NIST does do, as one can say, is that it prooved the collapsed initiation possible, under certain requirements. But does it attempt to associate the tests (pellets, trusses heating) with what actually happened in the Towers? Well, if so, then please show me What areas had had insulation likely dislodged.
Read the NIST NCSTAR1-6 report. Starting at Chapter 5: Aircraft Impact Damage you will see images of damaged insulation, areas of column damage, severity of column damage, thermal response to the structures and numerous other pictures, charts and graphs.
In particular, I would suggest figures 5-11, 5-13, 5-14, 5-15, 5-16, 5-17, 5-18, 5-19, 5-20, 5-21, 5-22, 5-23, and 5-24. They contain the areas of dislodgement (shown in green on most of the charts) along with areas showing column damage and damage to the floor trusses.
Yes, NIST does associate the tests with what happened in the towers. Reading chapter 4 as well as the introduction will give you an excellent example of what happened given the global collapse scenario.
I've been begging for this for some time already.
This is quite typical of the conspiracy theorist. If the information is not in front of you, it doesn't exist. If it does exist, it is someone else's job to provide it. Perhaps your research tactics could be significantly improved through the application of broader, more valid research methods.
I believe this is a crucial information which has not been disclosed,
It has been disclosed, in the report, in the figures I cited. I expect you'll retract this point in your next post.
So, (More gibberish below): Which two? FEMA and NIST? They came to different conclusions because they don't care about disclosing real investigations.
Non-sequitor. Here you're accusing NIST, the ASCE and FEMA of willfully obscuring information. Let's use this as a reference for future debates, ok?
FEMA's initial report, which was headed by the ASCE, was based primarily on ground, video and photographic representations of the collapse. The ASCE report to congress in 2003 has far more similarities with the NIST report than you realize, considering that you've read neither. For instance, both NIST and the ASCE agree that the towers would not have collapsed from the plane impact alone, or from the fires alone. The ASCE reported that dislodged fireproofing weakened the steel structure, and that the jet fuel from the planes ignited office equipment, causing extensive, hot burning fires.
Furthermore, the ASCE report was complied from structural observations made over a few weeks at ground zero and from several months of deterministic reconstruction. The NIST report is the result of years worth of research and funding and used the more robust stochastic methods where collapse sequences were found based on statistical-mechanical models, rather than deterministic ones. Of course the reports are going to have discrepencies, but on the major points of collapse initiation and reconstruction, both agencies agree.
If they did, then you'd see NIST's computer model released on national TV,
Stop. National TV? You mean, in a special between American Idol and House, NIST is going to spend an hour explaining to the general public the details of a computer simulation based on statistical mechanics?
Science is not TV. NIST presented their model, all of the assumptions and calculations, the equations and the links to real life situations in a peer-reviewed, drafted for public comment, 10,000 page document. That's science, and that's the way science is presented.
Done? You mean, as soon as it's printed, we rush off to the press and plop down the answer? Or do you mean, after an extended analysis, fact-checking, peer review, publication in draft format, acceptance and presentation of the data at major professional conferences, reception of public criticism, and re-publication of a revised draft?
The mere fact that the NIST doesn't analyze the actual collapse is enough reason to doubt if they had any intentions to investigate what happened.
I would highly suggest reading the National Construction Safety Team Act. It defines NIST's role in the WTC investigation as determining the moment of collapse initiation and making
recommendations to the industry about how to prevent collapse initiation. We don't build buildings to stop collapses, we build them to prevent them from happening. It would be an enormous waste of time and resources to reconstruct the dynamic collapse model, and it would provide no useful information to the public or the professional community about how to more safely design buildings.
All I see is a luster they had, to gather potential data so to explain a predefined hypothesis. Ah there you go, trash talk against trash talk.
Predefined? So, you're a scientist (let's pretend). You've spent your entire life studying, working as a professional, doing research, and gaining national recognition as a leader in your field. One day, the boss walks up to you and says, "Hey, I need you to prove that the predefined hypothesis of the WTC collapse is right." To which you respond, "What if the hypothesis is wrong?" Your boss looks at you, pulls out a gun, clicks off the safety and says, "Because, if you don't find the hypothesis right, I'm going to shoot you in the head."
I mean, thank God all of the data, the information from 200 different independent investigators, the assumptions in your model, the results of your calculations, the theory behind thermodynamic responses of steel to heat, all of that is correct and agrees with your gun-wielding boss's pre-defined hypothesis.
Is that how you think NIST works?
Nonetheless, Please debunk me by showing me what ever analysis that concludes which areas were likely to have their trusses dislodged, I'm getting tired of dragging this on.
Consider yourself debunked.
Have they said anything at all though? I haven't even seen a scenario where they find it "likely". The ones they let us see over the web are those labeled "possible". I guess that's enough to prove beyond reasonable doubt. Yup.
Please show me a funded scientific investigation that proves something true beyond a reasonable doubt.
They would have to stay mostly intact, because had they broke and twisted apart, that means that there was enough resistance below to crush them back. How can the downwards energy which was "overwhelmingly strong", be resisted back as to obliterate the upper part even halfway down? I reckon the lower part would suffer gradual damage over time, but that is on a lower ratio, not the whole block breaking apart and leaving nothing like a pile behind.
Newton's third law. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Applying 100 kN of force to the ground means that the ground applies 100 kN back to you. If the falling towers gained both mass and speed as they fell, the force applied to the lower portions by the upper portions (which was enough to crush them) was equal and opposite to those applied by the upper portions to the lower ones.
Why did it lean over in the first place then?
The leaning was the result of gradual softening of the steal frame through heat and applied load.
If the immediate intact structure below was strong enough to resist it and make it lean, then why didn't the even lower and intact columns below couldn't keep making it lean?
Are you 6 feet tall? Stand up and move the upper portion of your body 2.5 feet to the left. Do you feel yourself leaning? How well is all of that structure below your head keeping you in the air?
Leaning means there was enough resistance, in at least one side of the tower, and meaning, there was not enough initial force to crash it down.
False. This leaning was actually what caused the collapse. Since you've already go NCSTAR1-6 out, turn to page 265, chapter 8 and read the effect of column buckling on the internal columns.
There was not enough initial force from the upper block to crash the intact structure below, in at least one side.
This is the sort of claim that should be supported by mathematics.
Then how did it kept going down, on every side anyway? If the building wasn't sturdy enough, then it means that the blocks would have to first obliterate themselves in a pancaking style, before contributing to the collapse.
False. Sturdy has nothing to do with the collapse. The towers, like all structures had no capacity to stop collapse once it started. And no, the blocks do not have to obliterate themselves before contributing to collapse for the same reason that a rock does not have to break in order to break a windshield.
But they didn't. The collapse wave was somewhat constant,
This shows a fundamental misunderstanding of physics. The collapse wave was nowhere near constant. It obeyed the law of gravity and accelerated towards the earth.
Debris ejection accounts for potential energy wasted outside the straight collapse. The dust as well. I don't know the formulas to account for all that.
I do, and I can assure you that you are completely wrong. But why are you making this claim if you admit that you have no way to prove it?
But visibly speaking, it did not simply fall straight down, as some models some experts have presented.
Which models and which experts?
There were many exterior columns being shot outwards. Sadly there's no easy way to know how much of the structure did not contribute on the collapse,
Except by modeling the collapse initiation event. Now, I wonder who did that...
thanks to all the dust encompassing the ejecting materials. We know there was steel beams everywhere after the buildings collapsed, but that's a weak point as well, since the outer columns could have peeled off at the last moments of the collapse, or however you want to put it. It's a weak argument, I know.
You appear to be arguing in a "God of the Gaps" style fallacy. Any energy you cannot account for by a self initiated collapse, you have assumed can be accounted for by ejecta, pulverization and "peeling". Without the proper equations and energy balances to account for the energy, this argument is not only weak, it's completely invalid.
Hindsight hasn't even helped us in this case. It's been more than 5 years already, and there's no open model as to how they fell the way it was seen.
What would these open models prove? What can we learn from them?
Now write your responses to these two questions in a thoughtful, well expressed letter to one of the following organizations:
National Academy of Sciences
National Science Foundation
American Society of Civil Engineers
The Pugh Charitable Trust
The Carnegie Research Institute
The Gates Foundation
The MacArthur Fellowship
I do not wish to keep arguing these technical aspects, (nor only because I have almost no strong points in it, but) because it is, as you say, too technical for us to understand through common sense. If you keep going, I won't ignore you though.
I know that I can be an elitist dufus when it comes to technical matters, but you have to understand that I loathe people who criticize what I consider to be valid, well researched positions with complaints that are irrational, illogical and invalid. You say you aren't convinced on the technical issues, but you also admit that you are incapable of arguing about them. That says to me that you are both arrogant and willfully ignorant, and that you would prefer that everyone agree with you based on the strength of your convictions. That's a terrible paradigm.
Instead, consider that a well educated, practicing structural engineer is willing to sit down and explain to you the questions and concerns you have in a language which is simple to understand. Now, ask your questions from the standpoint of someone who is trying to make up his mind, not from someone who has a lot of bad arguments and unfounded assumptions. We can set up an honest, fruitful dialog if you're willing to change the foundation of your assumptions.