Re: Goodbye, Mr Roberts
Delpht wasn't a "falling anvil" collapse so as I can tell. It is entirely possible from what little I know so far that:
What we can see is the upper floors collapsing "quickly". Sure, no problem.
Floor 6 quite possibly did not collapse because it was impacted above from a falling floor 7, but rather because it was so weakened that it fell "out from under" floor 7, pulling it (and all the fire weakened floors from there on up) down on top of itself.
Floor 6, if it was any where close to as fire damaged as the floors above it (and I'm guessing it was) would have probably gone first, since it (1) was constructed the same way, but (2) bore more weight than the floors above.
Given accurate measurements of that motion (multiple reliable position measurements over time) one can calculate (1) the upper portions position, (2) the upper portions velocity, (3) the upper portions acceleration, and hence finally (4) the force which the upper portion is placing on the lower portion during that time interval.
If, given all that, you find that the force (4) is less than the normal static load which the lower portion could support at that time, then that force did not and will not cause the collapse of the lower portion.
If the lower portion collapses anyway during that time interval, then there must be some other cause for its collapse.
Originally posted by c1ue
- Floors 6 and up all collapsed almost simultaneously, each floor having already been weakened by many hours of raging fire.
- Floors 1 to 5 did one of:
- Collapse later that night, after the fire from the upper floor collapse had time to rage through the lower floors for a few hours, or
- Some or all of them did not collapse (I can't tell what happened to the first floor or two from the pictures I've seen)
- Some or all of them did collapse as if hit with the "Falling Anvil" of the upper floors, causing those falling upper floors to decelerate as they impacted those lower floors -- But you do not have the accurate measurements of the position, velocity and acceleration of any specific spot on an upper floor during the time period of the lower floors collapsing to determine the presence or absence of such deceleration during that collapse.
What we can see is the upper floors collapsing "quickly". Sure, no problem.
Floor 6 quite possibly did not collapse because it was impacted above from a falling floor 7, but rather because it was so weakened that it fell "out from under" floor 7, pulling it (and all the fire weakened floors from there on up) down on top of itself.
Floor 6, if it was any where close to as fire damaged as the floors above it (and I'm guessing it was) would have probably gone first, since it (1) was constructed the same way, but (2) bore more weight than the floors above.
This is not just a matter of how fast the building falls.
This is not just a matter of how fast the building falls.
This is not just a matter of how fast the building falls.
It is a matter of observing how much force a falling upper section is putting on a structurally sound (until the point of collapse) lower portion by observing the motion of that upper portion during some time interval in which it is claimed that the impacts of the falling upper section are causing the collapse of the lower section.This is not just a matter of how fast the building falls.
This is not just a matter of how fast the building falls.
Given accurate measurements of that motion (multiple reliable position measurements over time) one can calculate (1) the upper portions position, (2) the upper portions velocity, (3) the upper portions acceleration, and hence finally (4) the force which the upper portion is placing on the lower portion during that time interval.
If, given all that, you find that the force (4) is less than the normal static load which the lower portion could support at that time, then that force did not and will not cause the collapse of the lower portion.
If the lower portion collapses anyway during that time interval, then there must be some other cause for its collapse.
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