How fast is fast?
chris lz:
The first thing to consider when attempting to discuss the collapse times of WTC 1 & 2 is what is meant by "fast", or "too fast".
It begs the question: How fast do people expect a structure such as one of the twin towers to fall anyway, and why?
In truth, the precise collapse times of WTC 1 and 2 are not known very well. I would say the probable error in most collapse time estimates (I have seen) is +/- 3 seconds. Thus it is no surprise that some give very low estimates ~ 10 seconds, while others have quoted figures as high as 16 seconds.
But we do know that for the first 3 - 4 seconds into each collapse, WTC 2 was moving relatively faster than WTC 1, so WTC 2 fell faster overall. Very roughly we find that the acceleration of the upper section of WTC 2 was 3/4 g, while the acceleration of WTC 1 was about 2/3 g. But remember that this is only true for the first 3 - 4 seconds of collapse which is certainly less than 1/2 of the total collapse time.
As an aside I might add that when anti-sophist says: "He has failed to falsify the official narrative", there is a problem because there really is no official narrative as to the precise collapse times.
Anyway, the fact that the upper sections of WTC 1 & 2 fell at approximately constant accelerations, (that are less than g), tells us that there was an effective resistance being offered by the buildings to the downward motion of the upper block, and this resistive force was approximately constant. This leads to the idea of an energy term E1, defined as the energy needed to collapse one floor, which must be less than the kinetic energy gained per floor by the falling upper section, for the collapse to be self-sustaining.
E1 is also the work performed by the upper block so it is a force times a distance. We can vary the resistive force anyway that appears to model the collapse mechanics. Thus we can have a force that only acts for a fraction of a second on impact, or we can have a force that acts smoothly over an entire floor height of 3.7 meters. Mathematically this may be represented by the integral of F(x)dx, but the bottom line is that you can calculate E1 and it turns out to be less than 1/2 of the available KE for the worse case of the initial upper block of ~ 15 floors for WTC 1. Hence such a model predicts a self-sustaining collapse for WTC 1 & 2.
chris lz:
The first thing to consider when attempting to discuss the collapse times of WTC 1 & 2 is what is meant by "fast", or "too fast".
It begs the question: How fast do people expect a structure such as one of the twin towers to fall anyway, and why?
In truth, the precise collapse times of WTC 1 and 2 are not known very well. I would say the probable error in most collapse time estimates (I have seen) is +/- 3 seconds. Thus it is no surprise that some give very low estimates ~ 10 seconds, while others have quoted figures as high as 16 seconds.
But we do know that for the first 3 - 4 seconds into each collapse, WTC 2 was moving relatively faster than WTC 1, so WTC 2 fell faster overall. Very roughly we find that the acceleration of the upper section of WTC 2 was 3/4 g, while the acceleration of WTC 1 was about 2/3 g. But remember that this is only true for the first 3 - 4 seconds of collapse which is certainly less than 1/2 of the total collapse time.
As an aside I might add that when anti-sophist says: "He has failed to falsify the official narrative", there is a problem because there really is no official narrative as to the precise collapse times.
Anyway, the fact that the upper sections of WTC 1 & 2 fell at approximately constant accelerations, (that are less than g), tells us that there was an effective resistance being offered by the buildings to the downward motion of the upper block, and this resistive force was approximately constant. This leads to the idea of an energy term E1, defined as the energy needed to collapse one floor, which must be less than the kinetic energy gained per floor by the falling upper section, for the collapse to be self-sustaining.
E1 is also the work performed by the upper block so it is a force times a distance. We can vary the resistive force anyway that appears to model the collapse mechanics. Thus we can have a force that only acts for a fraction of a second on impact, or we can have a force that acts smoothly over an entire floor height of 3.7 meters. Mathematically this may be represented by the integral of F(x)dx, but the bottom line is that you can calculate E1 and it turns out to be less than 1/2 of the available KE for the worse case of the initial upper block of ~ 15 floors for WTC 1. Hence such a model predicts a self-sustaining collapse for WTC 1 & 2.