Re: Goodbye, Mr Roberts
Wrong. If you had the same physics professor as c1ue, then perhaps the two of you should consider initiating a class action lawsuit against him for malpractice .
I've already explained it multiple times above. Chandler explains it clearly in his papers and videos. I hold virtually no hope that I can get you to understand, but foolish cow that I am, I will try one more time.
Let me perform two experiments with your bowling ball. Perhaps using that familiar object will help.
Imagine the following two experiments.
By now you're probably thinking what the heck; the cow has dug himself quite a hole here and buried his argument a few hundred feet below ground level in downtown Manhattan. His fanciful elevator contraption (in the second experiment) is surely crushed to a billowing cloud of fine dust.
Whether his argument was crushed or went SPLAT, what did it matter? Either way, there's one less contentious cow to content with .
===
Well, sorry to disappoint you, but today is not your lucky day.
Look back up at that second experiment and notice where I emphasized "pressing quite gently". There was a period of time in the second experiment during which the bowling ball was pressing on my chest, though doing so with quite a bit LESS force than a similar ball would press when nothing was moving. My chest was not being injured during that period of time. It was feeling LESS TOTAL pressure than it would have felt if I were just resting a static bowling ball on my unmoving chest.
The fancy elevator contraption was thrusting me downward, increasingly fast, out of harm's way.
If we could measure the exact position (hence velocity and acceleration) of the ball as a function of time during that period of time, we would see that the ball was still accelerating downward, just at 2/3's Gravity instead of 1 full Gravity. From exactly such measurements we could know that for that period of time, whatever was below that bowling ball was pressing up at the ball with a force substantially LESS than a table or floor normally presses up on the bowl when it is at rest, a TOTAL force substantially LESS than the static weight of the ball. The TOTAL force from below was substantially LESS than Gravity, for it could not stop the downward acceleration, only reduce it by 1/3.
My chest received no damage during the period of time that the bowling ball was touching it, but still accelerating downward at 2/3 Gravity. The pressure on my chest was quite a bit less (just 1/3) of the pressure of a static ball.
Well, such exact measurements were taken in the WTC1 and WTC7 cases, and such results found. There was a period of time during which, for each building, many floors were being crushed into fine rapidly ejecting dust even as the falling upper portion was still accelerating downward at 2/3 (WTC1) or 1 (WTC7) Gravity.
Whatever was crushing floors during that time period (and the overwhelming and incontrovertible and uncontested evidence is that something was crushing floors during that period) was not the dynamic loading or impact forces between the upper (falling) and lower (still standing) portions of those buildings.
I'm rather sure as well that whatever it was that was "getting the lower floors out of the way" was not a fancy elevator contraption thrusting the lower towers down into a deep hole down to bedrock.
Originally posted by Ghent12
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I've already explained it multiple times above. Chandler explains it clearly in his papers and videos. I hold virtually no hope that I can get you to understand, but foolish cow that I am, I will try one more time.
Let me perform two experiments with your bowling ball. Perhaps using that familiar object will help.
Imagine the following two experiments.
- In the first experiment I lay flat on my back on the floor and you drop a bowling ball on my chest from a height of 25 feet. The bowling ball is light enough and my chest strong enough that I would have been able to support the static weight of the ball on my chest without injury. Let's say it's a 20 pound ball. My rib cage and bones are strong; I can support that easily enough.
Now let it drop.
Hmm ... guess we'd better perform this first experiment second, 'cause I just got killed when that falling bowling ball crushed my chest -- oops :eek:
Anyhow (perhaps as part of the autopsy) let's calculate what happened.
Presume two more things: that the floor I was laying on is a massive immobile steel reinforced concrete structure, and that my chest slowed down that falling ball as "gently" as possible with my still having a chance to survive, say over a depth of 0.5 feet.
Then by my calculations, the ball hits my chest moving at a velocity of V = √(2 * 32 * 25) = 40 ft/sec. The basic formula I used (solved for V) was Vē = 2*A*S, where V is Velocity, A is acceleration (Gravity of 32 ft/secē in this case) and S is distance (the 25 feet)
While the falling ball is decelerating from 40 ft/sec to 0 ft/sec through the 0.5 feet of my chest, it is exerting a force of its weight, plus whatever force is needed to decelerate it (what you termed dynamic loading, I presume) from 40 ft/sec to 0 ft/sec in that 0.5 foot. That deceleration is found using the same equation as above, this time solved for acceleration (deceleration, actually) X = Vē/ (2 * S), where X is the deceleration, V the velocity (-40 ft/sec) and S the distance (0.5 ft). This yields X = -40ē / (2 * 0.5) = -1600 ft/secē This -1600 deceleration is 50 times Gravity, so that deceleration is imposing a force on my chest of 50 times the gravitational force that the ball would impose if it motionless in 1 Gravity field. This computes to 50 * 20 lb = 1000 lb. Adding these two forces (deceleration and Gravity) together, we get a force of 1000 + 20 = 1020 lb on my chest.
I'm crushed.
:eek::eek: - In the second experiment (done first for the reason noted above) I am first strapped, laying on my back, to a platform firmly attached to a fancy elevator contraption that can move my prone body up or down in whatever rapid, precisely controlled, motions one desires.
Now let's program the elevator contraption to accelerate me sharply downward as the falling bowling ball hits my chest. We program this motion to accelerate me downward at the rate necessary to reduce the impact force of that falling ball sufficiently that, while it continues to accelerate (faster, faster, ...) downward, it is now only accelerating downward at just under 2/3's Gravity (about -20 ft/secē) rather than at freefall (-32 ft/secē) Gravity (ignoring air friction.)
Let's further suppose that we built this fancy elevator contraption over the granite bedrock beneath Manhattan and that the elevator will stop instantly (in less than 1 mm distance say) if it is ever driven down all the way to the bedrock. We've got a Wiley Coyote scene here, with me hurtling to my certain death, a 20 lb anvil (or ball, as the case be) on my chest, to the canyon floor.
I won't bother to presume some distance for the depth of the hole (say it's a few hundred feet) nor to then calculate the forces, times, velocities or accelerations. The results are quite clear and I'm sure we will all agree on them. It did not matter after all which experiment I did first; they're both quite lethal.
Faster, faster, faster, down I go, with the weight pressing quite gently on my chest (pushing on it with a force less than 1/3 it's static weight of 20 lb), until I hit bedrock with a resounding SPLAT! (and the ball then pulverizes any remaining sinew of my chest.)
:eek::eek:
By now you're probably thinking what the heck; the cow has dug himself quite a hole here and buried his argument a few hundred feet below ground level in downtown Manhattan. His fanciful elevator contraption (in the second experiment) is surely crushed to a billowing cloud of fine dust.
Whether his argument was crushed or went SPLAT, what did it matter? Either way, there's one less contentious cow to content with .
===
Well, sorry to disappoint you, but today is not your lucky day.
Look back up at that second experiment and notice where I emphasized "pressing quite gently". There was a period of time in the second experiment during which the bowling ball was pressing on my chest, though doing so with quite a bit LESS force than a similar ball would press when nothing was moving. My chest was not being injured during that period of time. It was feeling LESS TOTAL pressure than it would have felt if I were just resting a static bowling ball on my unmoving chest.
The fancy elevator contraption was thrusting me downward, increasingly fast, out of harm's way.
If we could measure the exact position (hence velocity and acceleration) of the ball as a function of time during that period of time, we would see that the ball was still accelerating downward, just at 2/3's Gravity instead of 1 full Gravity. From exactly such measurements we could know that for that period of time, whatever was below that bowling ball was pressing up at the ball with a force substantially LESS than a table or floor normally presses up on the bowl when it is at rest, a TOTAL force substantially LESS than the static weight of the ball. The TOTAL force from below was substantially LESS than Gravity, for it could not stop the downward acceleration, only reduce it by 1/3.
My chest received no damage during the period of time that the bowling ball was touching it, but still accelerating downward at 2/3 Gravity. The pressure on my chest was quite a bit less (just 1/3) of the pressure of a static ball.
Well, such exact measurements were taken in the WTC1 and WTC7 cases, and such results found. There was a period of time during which, for each building, many floors were being crushed into fine rapidly ejecting dust even as the falling upper portion was still accelerating downward at 2/3 (WTC1) or 1 (WTC7) Gravity.
Whatever was crushing floors during that time period (and the overwhelming and incontrovertible and uncontested evidence is that something was crushing floors during that period) was not the dynamic loading or impact forces between the upper (falling) and lower (still standing) portions of those buildings.
I'm rather sure as well that whatever it was that was "getting the lower floors out of the way" was not a fancy elevator contraption thrusting the lower towers down into a deep hole down to bedrock.
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