High energy physics does some weird things... But scorch marks and impact reside on the opposite side of a wall from point of detonation isn't one of them.
That would be antithetical to the linear transfer of energy from a single point.
This isn't to say you're wrong, but you'd have to show how it got there from a secondary source and within the timeframe allowed.
There's white painted walls inside, up high, where smoke and fire damage would be greatest.
The charring is on the outside walls and is such locations that it had to be from linear transfer. if it had come from smoke or fire from the inside, it would be concentrated above the holes in the wall as smoke and fire rises. Also, the non-charred debris from the collapsed portions, show that they landed on top of the already charred area. this would show that the thermal event occurred Before the wall portions collapsed... This would strongly suggest that the ignition point was outside the building, before overpressure caused the wall sections to collapse.
High energy physics does some weird things... But scorch marks and impact reside on the opposite side of a wall from point of detonation isn't one of them.
That would be antithetical to the linear transfer of energy from a single point.
This isn't to say you're wrong, but you'd have to show how it got there from a secondary source and within the timeframe allowed.
There's white painted walls inside, up high, where smoke and fire damage would be greatest.
The charring is on the outside walls and is such locations that it had to be from linear transfer. if it had come from smoke or fire from the inside, it would be concentrated above the holes in the wall as smoke and fire rises. Also, the non-charred debris from the collapsed portions, show that they landed on top of the already charred area. this would show that the thermal event occurred Before the wall portions collapsed... This would strongly suggest that the ignition point was outside the building, before overpressure caused the wall sections to collapse.