tfk said:
C7,
Ever hit a nail with a hammer & had it fly off sideways?
Yes. Entirely different conditions.
I'll add that analogy to the Big Mac file.
Nope. It's not "entirely different conditions" in the slightest. It is exactly the same.
A long, slender, semi-restrained element hit hard, but not perfectly aligned to the vertical axis of the nail, from above.
Another entirely different mechanism and a VERY valid analogy, is the tiddly-wink. Rotational motion is converted to linear motion by virtue of a single collision of one end of the "wink" (is that what it's called?) with the surface of the table. Notice when this happens, there is NO high velocity motion in either wink before the one wink gets shot off at high speed. There is NO "conservation of speed" principle. It is conservation of energy. And conservation of energy can, and often does, allow high speed events coming out of stored energy involving low speed inputs. (e.g., spring loaded guns).
Another different mechanism is simply the lever, as exemplified by jumping spoons on a table. Hit downward on the edge of the bowl of a spoon & you can shoot it with high velocity. Higher than your hand comes down.
tfk said:
if a 4 ton beam asembly is thrown to the side with enough horizontal velocity to make it 400 - 500 feet, then, BY DEFINITION, it has enough energy to embed itself into whatever it might contact at that point.
Correct. All that energy directed sideways was not caused by the top section of the tower falling straight down.
You missed my point. If the part has been thrown that far, then it ALREADY HAS all the energy it needs to embed itself in whatever it hits.
And in spite of your somewhat contrarian responses, you don't appear to appreciate the mechanical principles that are involved.
It is trivial to change slow motion into fast motion. It's called a lever.
It is trivial to change motion in one direction to motion in a different direction. It's called a collision.
It is trivial to change rotational motion to linear motion and back. It's also called a collision.
And, in spite of what Mr. Smith says, steel box columns WILL bend & store energy elastically. And then give it back in a rebound.
Even if cardboard box columns are particularly bad at it. (Of course, cardboard ones will, too. You just have to be very careful not to kink them.)
tk