valis
Muse
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2004
- Messages
- 647
Okay I will admit this is probably a really simple obvious question but I will ask anyway.
While listening to Coast to Coast am a week or two ago I heard some guy from the 9/11 scholars for truth. He repeatedly said that the towers could not have been brought down by an aircraft because the melting point of steel is X and the tempature jet fuel burns at is Y: X > Y, therefore the burning fuel could not have brought down the building.
This seemed to be a big thing with the guest as he yelled it repetadly to callers, saying the 'laws of physics' proved his point.
Okay here is the dumb question part, keep in mind I haven't taken physics yet...
Oh yeah...Put aside the issue of whether the steel even had to melt for the building to collapse, lets assume it did.
If the fuel is burning at X temp and is in an enclosed space; for instance the ceiling and floor and what are left of the walls are enclosing the fire somewhat, couldn't the temp in the building be higher than the burning temp of the jet fuel?
For instance if I have a light bulb whose surface reaches 100 degrees when operating and I put it in a box what will the tempeture in box reach; more than 100 degrees? If the heat has no where to go will it increase beyond a hundered degrees? So is the burning temp. of the fuel really a limit to the temps that could be reached in the fire?
edited to make question clearer
While listening to Coast to Coast am a week or two ago I heard some guy from the 9/11 scholars for truth. He repeatedly said that the towers could not have been brought down by an aircraft because the melting point of steel is X and the tempature jet fuel burns at is Y: X > Y, therefore the burning fuel could not have brought down the building.
This seemed to be a big thing with the guest as he yelled it repetadly to callers, saying the 'laws of physics' proved his point.
Okay here is the dumb question part, keep in mind I haven't taken physics yet...
Oh yeah...Put aside the issue of whether the steel even had to melt for the building to collapse, lets assume it did.
If the fuel is burning at X temp and is in an enclosed space; for instance the ceiling and floor and what are left of the walls are enclosing the fire somewhat, couldn't the temp in the building be higher than the burning temp of the jet fuel?
For instance if I have a light bulb whose surface reaches 100 degrees when operating and I put it in a box what will the tempeture in box reach; more than 100 degrees? If the heat has no where to go will it increase beyond a hundered degrees? So is the burning temp. of the fuel really a limit to the temps that could be reached in the fire?
edited to make question clearer