Focht3
Geotechnical
- Aug 23, 2002
- 1,840
For U.S. (and perhaps some Canadian) members of [green]Eng-Tips[/green] members: here is an interesting program on the collapse of the World Trade Center towers. It is based on the ASCE investigation and report. It's a good place to direct your curious non-engineer friends who want to understand why the towers fell. Here's the link for additional information as well as the press release I received by email:
_____________________________________________________________________
NEXT ON NOVA: "WHY THE TOWERS FELL"
Broadcast: September 9, 2003
(NOVA airs Tuesdays on PBS at 8 p.m. Check your local listings as
dates and times may vary.)
For most Americans, the image of the collapse of the World Trade Center
towers was not only a scene of unforgettable horror, it was a moment of
unimaginable consequence. Who could have guessed that a steel behemoth
of such size and strength -- a building so massive that it had its own
zip code -- could actually be reduced to 150 feet of dust and rubble? In
the Emmy-Award winning "Why the Towers Fell," NOVA reports on the
findings of the government-mandated American Society of Civil Engineers
(ASCE) investigation.
Here's what you'll find online:
Towers of Innovation
A basement like a bathtub. A building like a tube. An
elevator system like a subway system. These are just some
of the engineering marvels that made the quarter-mile-tall
World Trade Center possible.
The Collapse: An Engineer's Perspective
In this interview, Dr. Thomas Eagar, a professor of materials
engineering and engineering systems at MIT, explains how and
why the Twin Towers survived the initial impact -- and how
and why they likely failed in the end.
Above the Impact: A Survivor's Story
Brian Clark was one of only four individuals to escape either
tower from above the floors where the planes struck. Here, Clark
tells his riveting, vividly personal tale.
Outfitting Firefighters
The firefighters that raced up the stairwells of the doomed
towers carried several dozen pounds of equipment, everything
from axes and turnout gear to thermal imaging cameras and self-
contained breathing apparatuses. In this feature, equip fire-
fighters for a high-rise response.
The Structure of Metal
Explore metal at the atomic level and discover how it's structured,
why it bends, and what happens when it heats up.
NOVA News Minutes
Watch news clips related to the program.
Plus Resources.
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
Thank you for visiting NOVA Online. We welcome your questions, comments,
and feedback. You can send a message directly to nova@wgbh.org, or use
our feedback form at
You are subscribed to the NOVA Online mailing list. To unsubscribe, go
to -- or send an e-mail
to majordomo@franz.wgbh.org and, on a line by itself in the message,
type: unsubscribe nova-online
Major funding for NOVA is provided by the Park Foundation, Sprint, and
Microsoft.
_____________________________________________________________________
![[pacman] [pacman] [pacman]](/data/assets/smilies/pacman.gif)
Please see FAQ731-376 by [blue]VPL[/blue] for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
_____________________________________________________________________
NEXT ON NOVA: "WHY THE TOWERS FELL"
Broadcast: September 9, 2003
(NOVA airs Tuesdays on PBS at 8 p.m. Check your local listings as
dates and times may vary.)
For most Americans, the image of the collapse of the World Trade Center
towers was not only a scene of unforgettable horror, it was a moment of
unimaginable consequence. Who could have guessed that a steel behemoth
of such size and strength -- a building so massive that it had its own
zip code -- could actually be reduced to 150 feet of dust and rubble? In
the Emmy-Award winning "Why the Towers Fell," NOVA reports on the
findings of the government-mandated American Society of Civil Engineers
(ASCE) investigation.
Here's what you'll find online:
Towers of Innovation
A basement like a bathtub. A building like a tube. An
elevator system like a subway system. These are just some
of the engineering marvels that made the quarter-mile-tall
World Trade Center possible.
The Collapse: An Engineer's Perspective
In this interview, Dr. Thomas Eagar, a professor of materials
engineering and engineering systems at MIT, explains how and
why the Twin Towers survived the initial impact -- and how
and why they likely failed in the end.
Above the Impact: A Survivor's Story
Brian Clark was one of only four individuals to escape either
tower from above the floors where the planes struck. Here, Clark
tells his riveting, vividly personal tale.
Outfitting Firefighters
The firefighters that raced up the stairwells of the doomed
towers carried several dozen pounds of equipment, everything
from axes and turnout gear to thermal imaging cameras and self-
contained breathing apparatuses. In this feature, equip fire-
fighters for a high-rise response.
The Structure of Metal
Explore metal at the atomic level and discover how it's structured,
why it bends, and what happens when it heats up.
NOVA News Minutes
Watch news clips related to the program.
Plus Resources.
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
Thank you for visiting NOVA Online. We welcome your questions, comments,
and feedback. You can send a message directly to nova@wgbh.org, or use
our feedback form at
You are subscribed to the NOVA Online mailing list. To unsubscribe, go
to -- or send an e-mail
to majordomo@franz.wgbh.org and, on a line by itself in the message,
type: unsubscribe nova-online
Major funding for NOVA is provided by the Park Foundation, Sprint, and
Microsoft.
_____________________________________________________________________
![[pacman] [pacman] [pacman]](/data/assets/smilies/pacman.gif)
Please see FAQ731-376 by [blue]VPL[/blue] for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.