jaydeehess
Penultimate Amazing
Sorry for the erroneous attributation W.D.C.
Looking back I see why I read femr's post as attributing this to W.D.Clinger, the speculation followed femr referencing your name.
My apologies. As I said I really don't care who comes up with these things, I am interested only in discussion of the topic.
Its been 30 years since I did any statistical analysis in physics so much of that discussion is only vaguely grasped, and although several of my university buddies were engineers that makes me about as qualified in structural engineering as I would had I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night.
That said I do have the background in physics, and I can deduce what these added complexities mean in as much as drawing conclusions about what caused the collapse. Simply put it removes the ability to label the high acelleration as the result of explosive demolition of the columns.
From high school physics
s=s0+v0t+0.5at2 an equation which I found at the time of my first exposure to it in 1974, to be elegant in its prediction of what happens. or its derivative ds/dt=v0+at I agree that anyone who can look at these simple equations and not see how initial velocity will affect the results (or worse, ignores it/assumes it equals zero) needs to take a course in physics
No, he did not. He noted that I had "speculated about the possible reasons why faster-than-freefall acceleration of certain building features would be possible". In the following paragraph, femr2 offered his own speculation about a slingshot mechanism. It appears to have been jaydeehess who incorrectly attributed the slingshot idea to W.D.Clinger.
Fine. I hope you will stop blaming me for it, however.
Looking back I see why I read femr's post as attributing this to W.D.Clinger, the speculation followed femr referencing your name.
My apologies. As I said I really don't care who comes up with these things, I am interested only in discussion of the topic.
Its been 30 years since I did any statistical analysis in physics so much of that discussion is only vaguely grasped, and although several of my university buddies were engineers that makes me about as qualified in structural engineering as I would had I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night.
That said I do have the background in physics, and I can deduce what these added complexities mean in as much as drawing conclusions about what caused the collapse. Simply put it removes the ability to label the high acelleration as the result of explosive demolition of the columns.
In posts 216, 231, and 294, I have suggested a fourth choice: an over-simplified model of the roof's motion (or, if you prefer, tfk's unfortunate choice of time origin). If you don't understand how neglecting the roof's initial velocity at t=0 can lead to an incorrect conclusion of faster-than-free-fall acceleration for the roof as a whole, then you have a little homework to do before you rejoin this conversation.
From high school physics
s=s0+v0t+0.5at2 an equation which I found at the time of my first exposure to it in 1974, to be elegant in its prediction of what happens. or its derivative ds/dt=v0+at I agree that anyone who can look at these simple equations and not see how initial velocity will affect the results (or worse, ignores it/assumes it equals zero) needs to take a course in physics
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