westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
Sorry if this has been done before - but I haven't seen this particular analysis.
While reading the Judy Wood "Billiard Ball" paper, (the URL to which I am not allowed to post) I was struck by the following:
This is obviously very silly stuff, but it did stimulate me to try to calculate the kinetic energy involved in the collapse of one of the WTC buildings by one floor. This initially seemed a tricky calculation, but if it is done by calculating the difference in potential energy between the two positions, it's actually very simple.
I used the following values, all obtained from Wikipaedia, except for the weight. The weight of one of the WTC buildings has been a matter of dispute, but I've used the most commonly accepted value. I've used SI units - kilograms, metres and seconds.
Weight - 500,000 tonnes, or 500,000,000 kg
Height - 411 m
Number of floors - 110
Height of one floor - 3.7 m
Acceleration due to gravity - 9.8 m/s2
I've assumed that it's the top third of the building that is falling, so that gives
Effective weight - 166,666,666 kg
Using the formula for potential energy - mgh - we get
166,666,666 * 3.7 * 9.8 = 6,106,868,409 Joules
This being an impressive but not very meaningful number, I decided to give it in terms of tons of TNT. One ton (not tonne) of TNT releases 4,184,000,000 Joules when detonated. This gives us a value of 1.5 tons of TNT equivalent energy released when the top floors of the WTC drop one floor. This was described by Judy Wood as a small amount of energy.
It should be noted that the energy isn't all kinetic energy. Some of it will be expended crushing the contents of the floor that is collapsing, for example. But it will all have to be accounted for somehow.
I would be very grateful for any constructive criticism of the above calculations. They seem sound to me, but I might have missed something.
The main reason I've posted this is that it's a very easy calculation to make. All the information is publicly available. The potential energy formula is very easy. The more complex momentum analysis isn't needed. It's a simple matter of a vast amount of energy being released in a violent and uncontrolled fashion.
While reading the Judy Wood "Billiard Ball" paper, (the URL to which I am not allowed to post) I was struck by the following:
Looking at the data, we take the conservative approach that a falling floor initiates the fall of the one below, while itself becoming pulverized. In other words, when one floor impacts another, the small amount of kinetic energy from the falling floor is consumed (a) by pulverizing the floor and (b) by breaking free the next floor. In reality, there isn't enough kinetic energy to do either.
This is obviously very silly stuff, but it did stimulate me to try to calculate the kinetic energy involved in the collapse of one of the WTC buildings by one floor. This initially seemed a tricky calculation, but if it is done by calculating the difference in potential energy between the two positions, it's actually very simple.
I used the following values, all obtained from Wikipaedia, except for the weight. The weight of one of the WTC buildings has been a matter of dispute, but I've used the most commonly accepted value. I've used SI units - kilograms, metres and seconds.
Weight - 500,000 tonnes, or 500,000,000 kg
Height - 411 m
Number of floors - 110
Height of one floor - 3.7 m
Acceleration due to gravity - 9.8 m/s2
I've assumed that it's the top third of the building that is falling, so that gives
Effective weight - 166,666,666 kg
Using the formula for potential energy - mgh - we get
166,666,666 * 3.7 * 9.8 = 6,106,868,409 Joules
This being an impressive but not very meaningful number, I decided to give it in terms of tons of TNT. One ton (not tonne) of TNT releases 4,184,000,000 Joules when detonated. This gives us a value of 1.5 tons of TNT equivalent energy released when the top floors of the WTC drop one floor. This was described by Judy Wood as a small amount of energy.
It should be noted that the energy isn't all kinetic energy. Some of it will be expended crushing the contents of the floor that is collapsing, for example. But it will all have to be accounted for somehow.
I would be very grateful for any constructive criticism of the above calculations. They seem sound to me, but I might have missed something.
The main reason I've posted this is that it's a very easy calculation to make. All the information is publicly available. The potential energy formula is very easy. The more complex momentum analysis isn't needed. It's a simple matter of a vast amount of energy being released in a violent and uncontrolled fashion.