Re: Goodbye, Mr Roberts
This really must be some extra-super-special thermite, the most extra-super-special incendiary in history. "Highest energy explosive available," you say? Quite interesting... Especially given that all forms of thermite are incendiary and unlike good ol' High Explosives, which are explosive.
But of course, there's essentially no documented evidence to support this theory of "highest energy explosive available" actually being used. You'd think there would be some video evidence or perhaps some audible evidence of these explosions happening. You know, in those old 1991 Iraq War videos from Baghdad, you can hear the bombs in the far distance. Bombs aren't quiet. Yet all the claims of hearing explosions seem to occur from people very close to the structures, as if they weren't hearing explosions caused by "the highest energy explosive available."
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow
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But of course, there's essentially no documented evidence to support this theory of "highest energy explosive available" actually being used. You'd think there would be some video evidence or perhaps some audible evidence of these explosions happening. You know, in those old 1991 Iraq War videos from Baghdad, you can hear the bombs in the far distance. Bombs aren't quiet. Yet all the claims of hearing explosions seem to occur from people very close to the structures, as if they weren't hearing explosions caused by "the highest energy explosive available."
) then the lower portion would suffer rapid and catastrophic collapse. The question is how fast would the upper portion have to hit the lower portion to cause sudden catastrophic collapse of the lower portion. Now we don't have any Death Stars here (notwithstanding some Death Rays that some of the more Far Friggin Out Truther sites discuss :rolleyes
so the question of "how fast" (v, below) becomes a question of "how far" (s, below.) For the upper portion to gain that velocity v, it had to fall more or less unimpeded for some sufficiently large distance s.
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