Then where did it go? Did it go up? Sideways?
The only way I can see it went, is down. Onto the floors below. Falling. Dropping. Accelerating under gravity, either as a solid lump or small pieces it would not make much difference, unless only one thing I can see as an exception would be the concrete and steel being pulverized to a floury powder - but how would such an act be accomplished? I have yet to see any explosive capable of silently and completely pulverizing rock AND STEEL into a fine powder... So, the rubble must have gone down, explosion or no explosion.
Or wait, are you saying that the upper block xylophoned upwards on the floor below??? OH I get it now...
Interesting theory... I'll think about it some more and can you please still answer my multi choice quizz above? Cheers
Re quizz - answers (1-4) are G. (re 1-3 - if anything falls it can only be on the uppermost, single floor of the structure below, re 4 my safety helmet may get scratched).
The famous
upper block consists in layman's terms of 280+ very strong vertical primary structure load bearing columns (interconnected by spandrels and core horizontal beams), 12-15 thin floors (mostly concrete) hanging on the columns (on an angle bar + 2 vertical bolts not to slide off) , a roof (with some hat trusses), a mast (and misc. (furniture, human beings, insulation, pipes, ducts, elevators, etc.)).
It is evidently not of uniform density, solid, rigid, indestructible, only one mass or force, etc, etc, as assumed by Bazant, Greening, Seffen & Co. If the
upper block were of uniform density or specific gravity, it would be 0.18 (tons/m3) or like a bale of straw or a straw mattress. Not surprising that straw men uses it!
You must agree that, if you drop a straw mattress on something, nothing much happens? Unless you are a retired professor that publishes a scientific (sic) report two days after 911 inventing fairy tales based on suspect assumptions (soon to be clarified by co-writer Apollo2?).
But I agree - if you drop a straw mattress gravity will affect it.
Now, the question is if the straw mattress will destroy steel columns and pulverize concrete floors hanging between the columns of a structure below? I doubt it very much as described in my articles. I think any partial collapse due to local failures will be arrested fairly quickly. Thus answers G.
Where did the straw mattress go? It seems it first implodes (is compressed) before anything happens to the structure below. Then there is a big cloud of smoke or dust around the straw mattress, hm the
upper block ... and when it is cleared the straw mattress is gone! It must have imploded in many small parts.
Many persons have asked my opinion what actually caused the demolition of the structure below! Evidently it was not the straw mattress dropping down from the sky, as I try to explain in layman's terms in this thread. So it must have been something else! You tell me!
I am in the safety (at sea) business, not house demolition business. But of course, if you do exactly the opposite of what I recommend, then you may sink a ship and kill people aboard (and ensure that a false accident investigation report is produced by the authorities -
http://heiwaco.tripod.com/disasterinvestigation.htm - to get away with murder. Very popular reading these days!).