Some of the things I am reading in this thread are just incredible.....
I'm just a lowly electrical engineer so discussions of structural engineering, collapse dynamics, etc are technically out of my field of expertise.....but even I can see the idiocy of what some of you truthers are saying...
The material, size and particulars of the elements (and connections) in the structures A and C are same and you can chose any types. As part C is smaller than part A, part C cannot apply sufficient energy on part A without destroying itself! Thus a one-way crush down of part A by part C is not possible under any circumstances.
You are kindly requested to demonstrate the opposite if you can.
So the material, size, and particulars of the elements and connections are the same....so what?
Let me get this straight....you are saying that because part C is smaller than part A then part C can only supply sufficient energy on part A (to "destroy" part A and cause a collapse and structural failure) if part C "destroys" itself?
So your argument against a gravity driven collapse that causes eventual failure (of course the failures would be local and not global....part C doesnt impact and cause failure to EVERY SINGLE section of part A instantly) is that "one of the sections is smaller than the other"?
Thats your argument? Its smaller? So because the over all section is smaller it therefore CANT supply sufficient energy?
That seems just a *tad* bit silly.....
Evidently, the application of kinetic energy by part C on part A must also be associated with a deceleration of the intact elements of part C away from interface C/A. This deceleration may cause a 'bounce' (no element failures, just elastic deformations and part C moves up) or element failures. In the latter case part A structure soon arrests the part C. In both cases all or part of the applied energy is transformed into elastic deformations.
Why does deceleration have to cause a "bounce" and not simply cause a.....well.....DECELERATION?
You seem to be assuming that it MUST bounce and that it must also not cause ANY element failures....
Lets say we have a "target" and a "bullet" made of the same material....arent you essentially saying that the bullet MUST bounce because...
A. Its smaller than the "target"
B. They are made of the same material
Cant the bullet still penetrate the material and simply slow down because of the initial impact?
I just don't get how you justify these assumptions you are making.....it seems strange to me....
But maybe I am completely wrong here and out of my element cause Im just an EE....someone correct me if I am way off base here.