We can take a break and fool around with some blues and folk music. It would be delightful.
Get a room you two...
We can take a break and fool around with some blues and folk music. It would be delightful.
sorry, but i've seen so many absurd theories seriously espoused by 911 CTers now that i can't tell the difference between 911 CT satire, and the real deal. I have to ask now when crazy theories are posted, as the last few that i thought were satire turned out to be 100% serious.
this is the same movement from which the "space beam energy weapons" and "holographic planes" theories have surfaced, both seemingly impossible to imagine anyone taking seriously.
the difference between 911 truth and satire doesn't exist if one doesn't consider the only characteristic that defines them: whether people actually, seriously believe the theories. other than that, there's no difference.
Frank, old buddy old pal. I'll clarify. By working this latest "Spiked Fireproofing" hoax, Greening has exposed himself as a joker. Since I find crush down crush up to be equally as untenable as spiked fireproofing, I reason it to be equally as much of a joke. Perhaps Apollo would care to clarify which of his theories are to be believed, and which are hoaxes.
I contacted Dr. Greening saying that the assuumptions upon which his CDCU theory is based are provably false assumptions. Below is one passage in which he refers metaphoically to his mistakes as "warts". My interpretation of Greening's backpedaling is that he knows his theory is wrong. Forgive me if my wording was unclear.
Greening:
No, they wouldn't be like that at all. They would be like criticizing someone else's first airplane for not being able to fly. All versions of CDCU make provably false assumptions about energy sinks (top block, amount of pulverizaion, mass staying in footprint) and ignore some energy sinks altogether (like the mushroom cloud, or anything else you wish to name it, the expansion of the pyroclastic flow, or anthing else you wish to name it).
Frank, how bout I fly you down to LA for a day, and we can have our little debate in my studio? We've got a nice big screen, we can talk at leisure about spontaneous thermite, CDCU, spiked fireproofing, corruption in the Canadian nuclear industry, or anything that's on your mind. We can take a break and fool around with some blues and folk music. It would be delightful.
Frank, old buddy old pal. how bout I fly you down to LA for a day, and we can have our little debate in my studio? We've got a nice big screen, we can talk at leisure about spontaneous thermite, CDCU, spiked fireproofing, corruption in the Canadian nuclear industry, or anything that's on your mind. We can take a break and fool around with some blues and folk music. It would be delightful.
My interpretation of Greening's backpedaling is that he knows his theory is wrong. Forgive me if my wording was unclear.
"In a private email to me, he admitted that it is wrong, but prefers to leave it published as it is, "warts and all".
Greening:
First of all I should tell you that some of the assumptions I used in my WTC collapse model were made only to simplify the math. In the year or more since my first published work on this subject in 2005, I have made many refinements to my calculation. I have simply not got around to writing a new paper. However, unlike Dr. Jones, I am not one to keep revising something I have already published. I prefer to leave my original paper more or less as it was first conceived (warts and all), and try to answer criticisms of it as best I can.……
But, be that as it may, let me say right away that although the assumption that all the mass remains in the upper block throughout the collapse was indeed made in my paper, this approximation is not crucial to a self-sustaining collapse. I and others, such as David Benson and Shagster on Physorg, have done many additional collapse calculations that consider so-called mass shedding and find that significant mass shedding can occur without causing collapse arrest. So any criticisms of my original paper with regard to this issue would be like criticizing the Wright brothers for not having wheels on their first airplane!
Here's what the Greening admission boils down to:
1. I accuse him of making false assumptions.
2. He doesn't deny making false assumtions, instead he moves the goalpost and says that his assumptions don't need to be true.
That, to me, is a clear admission that the assumptions in question are false.
Can we not all agree that Dr. Greening's assumptions about the "intact block" are false assumptions?
Greening's "crush-down crush-up" whopper is no more plausible than "spiked fireproofing". Nor was his "spontaneous thermite".
They are limiting assumptions made openly, with the clearly expressed intent to make the calculations simpler, or even possible
other cases in point.
In a multiple body system assuming the mass of each body to be a point mass at the center of each body.
In electronic circuit design, assuming a zero, base-collector capacitance.
In short distance signal transmission assuming no transmission losses or phase changes.
Approximations may be used because incomplete information prevents use of exact representations. Many problems in physics are either too complex to solve analytically, or impossible to solve. Thus, even when the exact representation is known, an approximation may yield a sufficiently accurate solution while reducing the complexity of the problem significantly.
For instance, physicists often approximate the shape of the Earth as a sphere even though more accurate representations are possible, because many physical behaviours — e.g. gravity — are much easier to calculate for a sphere than for less regular shapes.
The problem consisting of two or more planets orbiting around a sun has no exact solution. Often, ignoring the gravitational effects of the planets gravitational pull on each other and assuming that the sun does not move achieve a good approximation. The use of perturbations to correct for the errors can yield more accurate solutions. Simulations of the motions of the planets and the star also yields more accurate solutions.
The type of approximation used depends on the available information, the degree of accuracy required, the sensitivity of the problem to this data, and the savings (usually in time and effort) that can be achieved by approximation.
Newtonian dynamics (which is based on Galilean transformations) is the low speed limit of special relativity (since the Galilean transformation is the low-speed approximation to the Lorentz transformation). Similarly, the Newtonian gravitation law is a low-mass approximation of general relativity, and Coulomb's law is an approximation to Quantum Electrodynamics at large distances (compared to the range of weak interactions). In such cases it is common to use the simpler, approximate versions of the laws, instead of the more accurate general laws.
Suppose the building's materials were reduced to 10% of its original volume.
Volume of one WTC tower = (207 ft)x(207 ft)x(1368 ft)
Dust Volume (from one WTC tower) = (1/10)xVolumetower (approx.)
One square mile = (5280 ft)x(5280 ft)
Dust Volume for one WTC tower (approx.) = (1/10)x(207/5280)2x(1368x12 inches) = 2.52 inches deep over 1 square mile,
or equivalent to 1-inch deep over 2.52 square miles.
An area of 2.52 square miles would be a radius of 0.896 miles. Note that the area would include both land and water.
Suppose the building's materials were reduced to only 5% of the original volume.
Dust Volume for one WTC tower (approx.) = (1/20)x(207/5280)2x(1368x12 inches) = 1-inch deep over 1.26 square miles,
An area of 1.26 square miles would be a radius of 0.634 miles.
These calculations suggest that the towers had enough material to yield dust about an inch deep and cover approximately a square mile in lower manhattan, plus the dust carried over the Hudson River, the East River, Brooklyn, the Upper Bay, and into the upper atmosphere. So where did all the dust come from? It looks like it all came from the towers.
Hey! They told me there wouldn't be any math!
Will this still be graded on a curve?
He drew first blood in post #10.
I'm game for an intelligent conversation, but so far I don't see that he's supported his contention -- very strongly worded -- that NIST is "seriously flawed." If he can back that up, then we can discuss it in perfect calm and respect.
Your move, Apollo20.