NIST publishes FAQ in response to 'alternative theories' on WTC collapse
The National Institute of Standards and Technology has published an FAQ supplementing its report on the collapse of the World Trade Center twin towers.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology has published an FAQ supplementing its report on the collapse of the World Trade Center twin towers on Sept. 11, 2001, addressing persistent theories that the buildings were brought down by something other than the impact of two jetliners.
"We believe we have the sequence of events on the towers," said Michael Newman, spokesman for the NIST WTC investigation. "We never saw any evidence of additional factors that could contribute to the collapse."
Nevertheless, in the months after the October 2005 release of the comprehensive 43-volume study, NIST received frequent calls and e-mails about alternative theories that questioned whether the observed effects on the twin towers could be accounted for solely by the impact of jetliners, and offered alternatives such as missiles or controlled demolition.
"While we had not concentrated on these claims originally because we felt confident of our findings after 3.5 years of the most intense study, we thought that with the fifth anniversary coming up it would be a good opportunity to put up a fact sheet to address 14 of the most commonly asked questions," Newman said.
The full study is based on interviews with more than 1,000 people, the examination of 7,000 pieces of video and 7,000 photos, analysis of 236 pieces of steel from the wreckage, and the use of laboratory tests and computer simulations. Analysts concluded that the collapse was the result of a unique combination of factors:
- Structural damage done by the impact of the planes
- Fires ignited by jet fuel that were more widespread and intense than building standards anticipated
- Dislocation of fireproofing from the impact, exposing structural steel to the heat of this fire.
William Jackson is a staff writer forsister publication,Government Computer News