Tony Szamboti
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2007
- Messages
- 4,976
Tony,
Thank you for answering my previous questions. This leads to progress, I believe. (I'm busy today. I'll be able to respond later.)
Please answer precisely. Engineering terms.
What, exactly, determines the instantaneous magnitude of the acceleration?
What, exactly, determines the sequence (i.e., the timing) of the successive accelerations?
Tom
Instantaneous acceleration is the derivative of the velocity or dV/dT at a given point.
If you read the Missing Jolt paper you will see that we measure distance vs. time of the roof's fall. This is then differentiated to find velocity at each measurement point using
Vn = Dn-Dn-1/Tn-Tn-1 where D is distance and T is time.
With the velocity known at each point in the overall measurement time it can be graphed. Acceleration and deceleration are the derivative of velocity and thus comprise the slope of the velocity curve. If the slope is positive that is acceleration, if it is negative that is deceleration.
In the case of WTC 1's upper block fall there is no negative slope in the velocity curve and the velocity was increasing continuously, there was no deceleration.
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