Please look at this Zafar picture of the WTC1 event. The picture is taken looking east. Notice how much of the material is falling down and to the left, that is to the north. The wind was blowing towards the southeast that day, at about 5 mph. I can't think of any reason why there would be low pressure to the north of the tower. And it would take some extremely low pressure to suck so much mass so far, against the wind. Why would this material go that way?
Please look at this Zafar picture of the WTC1 event. The picture is taken looking east. Notice how much of the material is falling down and to the left, that is to the north. The wind was blowing towards the southeast that day, at about 5 mph. I can't think of any reason why there would be low pressure to the north of the tower. And it would take some extremely low pressure to suck so much mass so far, against the wind. Why would this material go that way?
The subject of this thread is:
What is the physical explanation for why the material in the OP photo is drifting to the north as it falls? It is doing so against the wind.
http://www.amanzafar.com/WTC/wtc65_small.JPG
Please look at this Zafar picture of the WTC1 event. The picture is taken looking east. Notice how much of the material is falling down and to the left, that is to the north. The wind was blowing towards the southeast that day, at about 5 mph. I can't think of any reason why there would be low pressure to the north of the tower. And it would take some extremely low pressure to suck so much mass so far, against the wind. Why would this material go that way?
Physics explanation sought
i think the subject of how the debris fell is the best way to highlight the confirmation bias of the truthers, ask 10 truthers and youll get 10 different (and often opposite) answers, but they all definitively prove demolitionI thought that one of the main CT issues indicating a controlled demolition was that the debris mostly fell straight down whereas in an uncontrolled collapse you'd expect the towers to topple a bit in one direction or another.
So what are you trying to prove here Truth Seeker. That the claims of the "Controlled Demolition" theorists are demonstrably false?
If so I think I have to agree with you.
TS1234 entertains a common misunderstanding. When something drops through a side-wind trailing something light (smoke or dust), he thinks the trail should lean upwind. But it doesn't, quite the contrary, it leans downwind. This is because at any point in time, the upper parts have been exposed to the wind for longer than the parts near the falling object. Thus, they will have drifted farther with the wind, so the upper part of the trail will point downwind, giving the false impression, in a still photo, that the falling object is moving upwind.
Hans
What confuses me a little here is the question of what implication a large region of low pressure to the north side of the tower has on one's understanding of how events progressed on 9-11. It doesn't seem relevant to controlled demolition or Star Wars energy beams. What's the hypothesis here?
It doesn't seem relevant to controlled demolition or Star Wars energy beams. What's the hypothesis here?
Dave
Check a local community college; they have classes.
[qimg]http://www.amanzafar.com/WTC/wtc65_small.JPG[/qimg]
Please look at this Zafar picture of the WTC1 event. The picture is taken looking east. Notice how much of the material is falling down and to the left, that is to the north. The wind was blowing towards the southeast that day, at about 5 mph. I can't think of any reason why there would be low pressure to the north of the tower. And it would take some extremely low pressure to suck so much mass so far, against the wind. Why would this material go that way?
Gravy, this photo is taken from the north looking south. It is also interesting, as it shows disintegrating steel, worthy of another thread. However, the photo in the OP shows that falling material did not go straight down. Gravity operates vertically. If falling material goes any other direction besides straight down, then some other force is at work. The wind was blowing southeast. Why does this free-falling material go north?
Steve, the distribution of debris is a very interesting topic, but is not the subject here. Objects which are falling fall straight down, unless acted upon by some other force. Clearly the material in the photo is falling down and to the left, that is to the north. Please tell me what force is present to explain this.
Attempting to determine the 3-d characteristics of the collapse, from a static picture, that only shows a 2-d image of the tower is STUPID.
And another thing, it is amazing how when the CTers use some bit of data they make it so absolute. If they are "researching' and find that the wind speed at a certain location was 5 mph SE, they assume that for that 24 hour period, the wind never varied from that vector. As somone who spent much of his youth on a sailboat, I can assure you that is not the case. The best laid plans for a race always fall apart due to the wind shifts.
Lurker