David B. Benson wrote:
By the way, notice what happens when you clap your hands together.
What happens? Does one hand one-way crush the other?
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David B. Benson wrote:
By the way, notice what happens when you clap your hands together.
David B. Benson wrote:That's close to what I calculated some time ago.Trippy wrote:Taking into account the reduced volume, and the fact that the perimeter columns were 1'-2" in the appropriate ddirection, and the void space in the cores, yields a cross sectional area of 1,067 m^2 - both window space and core void space to escape, and gives us a flow velocity of 15.2 m/s which is still Force 7 on the Beaufort Scale.
And yes, assuming all the windows already broken is quite reasoanble for the initiation floor 97. See NCSTAR1--5A.
no_body --- Poster Trippy is offering what I take to be valid criticisms and in a responsible manner.
By the way, notice what happens when you clap your hands together.
newton wrote:i hate to be the one to point out the painfully obvious, but if the sound of the first impact is what is recorded, and then the building continues "collapsing" by the same mechanism, then the increase in mass and energy expenditure will be reflected in the soundwave.
in other words, the sound will start small, ramp UP from there, and then ramp back down as the debris settles and the descent slows at the bottom.
david, what happens when you clap your hands together in rapid succession louder and louder? do you get one anomalous peak at the initiation of applause?
newton wrote:i see, but, as a total waveform output based on energy expended, the total sound output would be greater.
i do not see nor hear the ramping up of sound.
and, in fact, most cameras have built in compressors.
there is a phenomena known as "ducking". what happens is, if you imagine the compressor to be a pipe of fixed diameter, and the sound being something forced through the pipe, then, the compressor will shirnk the entire sound wave into a space that will fit through the pipe. however, this is not dome linearly. the loudest sounds and lowest frequencies will be less squished than the quieter sounds.
the helicopter is a good litmus. i really don't think it flew away quickly, and then flew back. it is more likely that it was in about the same general area, and the OTHER sounds caused the helicopter to be suppressed as all the sound was "squished through the pipe", so i would guess the loudest sound was happening while the helicopter is muted
i hear a low rumble BEFORE the building starts moving (my speakers go down to 5Hz and up to 40 000Hz).
i also notice that the cameras microphone doesn't go that low. there's a "hole" in the spectrum at around 160Hz. and, there is not much energy below that line. i would say that's the filter cutoff point, and any low frequencies that managed to still get recorded in the below 160 range must have been quite loud indeed. basically, though, the subsonic spectrum where all the action is was filtered out by the camera' mic. this "collapse" would have put out ample energy right down to less than 10 hz, i'm sure.
i'd be curious to know where the crowd was standing, and how their reaction correlates to the action of the tower. did they react to the rumble, or the visual? also, where was the helicopter, and what was it's flight pattern (as this would determine how much the cameras compressor was kicking in)?
obviously, the crowd is somewhere between the source and mic, and the helicopter could be anywhere, but fairly close, as it is quite loud.
no_body wrote:The Bob and Bri footage does not include the portion of audio we're discussing "Oh my God" says Bob or is it Bri? then there's a jump cut and the next thing is the tower is half way down. The bang on initiation is going to take close to a second to reach B&B's apartment, the cut in the video must be close to 7 seconds?.
no_body wrote:So what relevance does posting a comment about a video that does not contain the audio we're discussing have?
OED,[sic]
no_body wrote:obfuscate, v.
3. a. trans. Of a person: to make (a subject, etc.) unclear, obscure, confused, or difficult to understand.
Now it might be deliberate or it might be a personality trait, either way......
Would obfuscaters kindly leave the thread? you know who you are!![]()
no_body wrote:The sound we're discussing does not have the characteristic of wind.
no_body wrote:It's a loud distant sound that reverberates. It has a fast attack and short duration, most of the rest is early reflection and reverberation.
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