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I'm waiting with bated breath for the moment when Bin Laden's face appears in the smoke, or the lizard changes into George W Bush.
So far, so obvious. I'm sure this is leading somewhere. Can we cut to the chase?
Difficult to comment without seeing the actual video, but a lot depends on the internal structure of the building.
Consider a simple brick-built shed with a pitched, trussed roof (I've just rebuilt one!)
If you had a gas explosion near the base of the building, the bricks would blow outwards but the roof would remain fairly intact as the trusses can withstand tension as well as compression, so the entire roof would fall like a parachute. Now blow away the roof tiles (which will happen after a few seconds' descent, because shingles are only intended to support forces from outside) and the "parachute" approximates to your dense weight.
I can envisage a building where progressive failure in the lowest part of the walls becomes explosive as the upper part and roof accelerates downwards, with the lower walls bursting like an aneurysm under the increased internal pressure. In its simplest form the model is a cylinder whose walls are supporting a weighted piston. Once the cylinder begins to give way, the piston starts to compress the air inside and bursts the walls, which then allows the piston to fall. The total outward aerostatic force on the walls, once the building starts to collapse, equals the weight of every part that is no longer supported. Very few buildings (apart from nuclear power stations and the like) are designed to withstand outward force.
Is air/wind resistance a component of free fall? It is negligible at low speeds, but can be significant as one reaches terminal velocity.
Quote from: CliffordK on 21/11/2013 23:28:14Is air/wind resistance a component of free fall? It is negligible at low speeds, but can be significant as one reaches terminal velocity.It's wrong to say that It is negligible at low speeds because what is "low speed" depends on the particular object.
What is low speed for a cannon ball is not low speed for a feather.
Very little pressure is required to blow out a building. If my "idealised shed" roof fell one third of the height of the building, the excess internal pressure would be over 700 lb per square foot. Windows - especially large ones - give way well below that level, and the rigidity of a modern bulding is partly conferred by the stressed skin window structure.
Once a couple of steel uprights have buckled, the stress on the remainder is no longer compressive but rotational, and they aren't good at sustaining a rotational load.
It looks very much as though the video'd building was also minimally rigid.
That's incorrect.
It's not at all wrong to say that it's negligible in this case.
That depends. In air or in vacuo?